Let say I have this piece of code
public interface IFoo
{
}
public abstract class FooBase<TModel> : IFoo
{
public T Create<T>() where T : TModel;
}
public class Foo : FooBase<ModelBase>
{
public TModel Create<TModel>()
{
return Activator.CreateInstance(typeof(TModel));
}
}
public abstract class ModelBase
{
}
public class ModelFoo : ModelBase
{
}
public class ModelBar : ModelBase
{
}
Now, let say I have this class
public static FooProvider
{
public IFoo Get<TModel>()
{
var provider = ...; // find which IFoo class has generic TModel
return provider;
}
}
And I can manage to call this with
IFoo provider = FooProvider.Get<ModelBar>(); // -> instance of Foo
But I get an instance of IFoo
, therefore don't have access to the FooBase
methods. Is it possible to implement IFoo
(or an intermediary abstract class) to provide a method declaration that can be called without (necessarily) casting the return value provider
?
Ideally, I'd like to be able to do
ModelBar bar = FooProvider.Get<ModelBar>().Create<ModelBar>();
Is it possible?
FooBase<TModel>
instead ofIFoo
?FooBase<ModelBase>
when callingGet<ModelBar>
. As you can see,TModel
isModelBar
, notModelBase
and I cannot castFoo
intoFooBase<ModelBar>