54

I have come across numerous arguments against the inclusion of multiple inheritance in C#, some of which include (philosophical arguments aside):

  • Multiple inheritance is too complicated and often ambiguous
  • It is unnecessary because interfaces provide something similar
  • Composition is a good substitute where interfaces are inappropriate

I come from a C++ background and miss the power and elegance of multiple inheritance. Although it is not suited to all software designs there are situations where it is difficult to deny it's utility over interfaces, composition and similar OO techniques.

Is the exclusion of multiple inheritance saying that developers are not smart enough to use them wisely and are incapable of addressing the complexities when they arise?

I personally would welcome the introduction of multiple inheritance into C# (perhaps C##).


Addendum: I would be interested to know from the responses who comes from a single (or procedural background) versus a multiple inheritance background. I have often found that developers who have no experience with multiple inheritance will often default to the multiple-inheritance-is-unnecessary argument simply because they do not have any experience with the paradigm.

1
  • 5
    I fail to see how multiple inheritance is elegant.
    – Trap
    Aug 5, 2010 at 1:24

34 Answers 34

114

I've never missed it once, not ever. Yes, it [MI] gets complicated, and yes, interfaces do a similar job in many ways - but that isn't the biggest point: in the general sense, it simply isn't needed most of the time. Even single inheritance is overused in many cases.

23
  • 20
    Strictly speaking (and I am just paraphrasing Stroustrup here), that is true, and also it is true that single inheritance is not really needed. Furthermore, classes are not really needed either, right? It is not about "needed" but rather "nice to have" Oct 10, 2008 at 14:58
  • 7
    There are situations where any single feature would help. Does that mean a language should be a kitchen sink with every possible feature you can think of? I don't believe the added complexity burden of multiple inheritance is worth it.
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 10, 2008 at 15:00
  • 25
    If you took objects away, I would miss them sorely; that is the distinction. Objects add massive value at minimal complexity. Multiple inheritance adds (arguably) minimal value at massive complexity. Oct 10, 2008 at 15:00
  • 4
    OK, let me re-phrase; from my blinkered viewpoint as a .NET developer, /working with objects/ is simple. I know I would fail with MI very quickly. But yes, point taken - object increase complexity. It is about complexity vs reward; objects have big benefits; MI has some benefit, but not enough IMO. Oct 10, 2008 at 15:09
  • 4
    MI is simple, but if you can't trust yourself not to create a massive tree-like hierarchy, then I think you shouldn't be programming at all. I think the C# designer just wanted to keep life easy for himself, MI is difficult for compilers.
    – gbjbaanb
    Oct 10, 2008 at 15:22
37

Prefer aggregation over inheritance!

class foo : bar, baz

is often better handled with

class foo : Ibarrable, Ibazzable
{
  ... 
  public Bar TheBar{ set }
  public Baz TheBaz{ set }

  public void BarFunction()
  {
     TheBar.doSomething();
  }
  public Thing BazFunction( object param )
  {
    return TheBaz.doSomethingComplex(param);
  }
}

This way you can swap in and out different implementations of IBarrable and IBazzable to create multiple versions of the App without having to write yet another class.

Dependency injection can help with this a lot.

5
  • I agree. What you can do with delegation and composition vastly exceeds what you can do with multiple inheritance. And is often the more sustainable solution anyway.
    – Wedge
    Oct 10, 2008 at 21:39
  • 4
    You can use mixin here, instead of manually writing the composition :-)
    – Ron Klein
    May 13, 2009 at 12:04
  • Absolutely. However, I was trying to illustrate a concept, which is often best done by showing a naive implementation. May 13, 2009 at 12:51
  • 3
    Replace "aggregation" with "composition" in your example. If you come from Multiple Inheritance you NEED all the classes in your composed super-class. Here are the differences between aggregation and composition: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object_composition#Aggregation Jan 19, 2010 at 13:19
  • Yes, you can do this, but it's a pain! If the language supports MI it's cake.
    – Pete Alvin
    Oct 1, 2010 at 17:07
25

One of the issues with dealing with multiple inheritance is the distinction between interface inheritance and implementation inheritance.

C# already has a clean implementation of interface inheritance (including choice of implicit or explicit implementations) by using pure interfaces.

If you look at C++, for each class you specify after the colon in the class declaration, the kind of inheritance you get is determined by the access modifier (private, protected, or public). With public inheritance, you get the full messiness of multiple inheritance—multiple interfaces are mixed with multiple implementations. With private inheritance, you just get implementation. An object of "class Foo : private Bar" can never get passed to a function that expects a Bar because it's as if the Foo class really just has a private Bar field and an automatically-implemented delegation pattern.

Pure multiple implementation inheritance (which is really just automatic delegation) doesn't present any problems and would be awesome to have in C#.

As for multiple interface inheritance from classes, there are many different possible designs for implementing the feature. Every language that has multiple inheritance has its own rules as to what happens when a method is called with the same name in multiple base classes. Some languages, like Common Lisp (particularly the CLOS object system), and Python, have a meta-object protocol where you can specify the base class precedence.

Here's one possibility:

abstract class Gun
{ 
    public void Shoot(object target) {} 
    public void Shoot() {}

    public abstract void Reload();

    public void Cock() { Console.Write("Gun cocked."); }
}

class Camera
{ 
    public void Shoot(object subject) {}

    public virtual void Reload() {}

    public virtual void Focus() {}
}

//this is great for taking pictures of targets!
class PhotoPistol : Gun, Camera
{ 
    public override void Reload() { Console.Write("Gun reloaded."); }

    public override void Camera.Reload() { Console.Write("Camera reloaded."); }

    public override void Focus() {}
}

var    pp      = new PhotoPistol();
Gun    gun     = pp;
Camera camera  = pp;

pp.Shoot();                    //Gun.Shoot()
pp.Reload();                   //writes "Gun reloaded"
camera.Reload();               //writes "Camera reloaded"
pp.Cock();                     //writes "Gun cocked."
camera.Cock();                 //error: Camera.Cock() not found
((PhotoPistol) camera).Cock(); //writes "Gun cocked."
camera.Shoot();                //error:  Camera.Shoot() not found
((PhotoPistol) camera).Shoot();//Gun.Shoot()
pp.Shoot(target);              //Gun.Shoot(target)
camera.Shoot(target);          //Camera.Shoot(target)

In this case, only the first listed class's implementation is implicitly inherited in the case of a conflict. The class for other base types must be explicitly specified to get at their implementations. To make it more idiot-proof, the compiler can disallow implicit inheritance in the case of a conflict (conflicting methods would always require a cast).

Also, you can implement multiple inheritance in C# today with implicit conversion operators:

public class PhotoPistol : Gun /* ,Camera */
{
    PhotoPistolCamera camera;

    public PhotoPistol() {
        camera = new PhotoPistolCamera();
    }

    public void Focus() { camera.Focus(); }

    class PhotoPistolCamera : Camera 
    { 
        public override Focus() { }
    }

    public static Camera implicit operator(PhotoPistol p) 
    { 
        return p.camera; 
    }
}

It's not perfect, though, as it's not supported by the is and as operators, and System.Type.IsSubClassOf().

5
  • 2
    +++ on this one for me. Eiffel and Sather are good examples of multiple inheritance done right.www.icsi.berkeley.edu/~sather/
    – mancaus
    Oct 10, 2008 at 17:56
  • In Sather a class exposes no interface other than that defined by the interfaces it "inherits". Implementation inheritance is via an "include" keyword that does just that, but allows renaming to avoid namespace conflicts. Sather also had many other features only recently introduced into C#.
    – mancaus
    Oct 10, 2008 at 17:57
  • Great response. The use of implicit operators is an interesting approach but unfortunately doesn't come with the benefits of the compiler understanding an MI tree. The correctness of any inheritance tree needs to be maintained by the developer. Oct 13, 2008 at 7:45
  • 2
    A good use of multiple inheritance in C++ was as a way to implement mixins (en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mixin). I think that native C# support for mixins (or private implementation inheritance) would be a helpful feature. Oct 24, 2008 at 5:32
  • +1. To the other comments about mixins: Thats why Objective-C has Categories (effictively mixins) and doesnt need MI for that reason. Nov 24, 2009 at 14:15
15

Here is a very useful case for multiple inheritance that I run into all of the time.

As a toolkit vendor, I cannot change published API's or I will break backwards compatibility. One thing that results from that is that I cannot ever add to an interface once I have released it because it would break compilation for anyone implementing it -- the only option is to extend the interface.

This is fine for existing customers, but new ones would see this hierarchy as needlessly complex, and if I were designing it from the beginning, I would not opt to implement it this way -- I have to, or else I will lose backwards compatibility. If the interface is internal, then I just add to it and fix the implementors.

In many cases, the new method to the interface has an obvious and small default implementation, but I cannot provide it.

I would prefer to use abstract classes and then when I have to add a method, add a virtual one with a default implementation, and sometimes we do this.

The issue, of course, is if this class would likely be mixed in to something that is already extending something -- then we have no choice but to use an interface and deal with extension interfaces.

If we think we have this problem in a big way, we opt for a rich event model instead -- which I think is probably the right answer in C#, but not every problem is solved this way -- sometimes you want a simple public interface, and a richer one for extenders.

12

C# supports single inheritance, interfaces and extension methods. Between them, they provide just about everything that multiple inheritance provides, without the headaches that multiple inheritance brings.

4
  • (except maybe state from multiple ancestors... but I'm with you on this one ;-p) Oct 10, 2008 at 14:56
  • @Marc, damn, I knew my sweeping generalisation would come back to bite me. Edited slightly to cover your point :)
    – David Arno
    Oct 10, 2008 at 14:59
  • 2
    Similar, but not the same. I would also argue that extension methods come with they're own flavour of complexity. I think CodingHorror had a post on this. Oct 10, 2008 at 15:01
  • 1
    Said Coding Horror post, for anyone interested.
    – Hannele
    May 21, 2014 at 15:22
8

Multiple inheritance isn't supported by the CLR in any way I'm aware of, so I doubt it could be supported in an efficient way as it is in C++ (or Eiffel, which may do it better given that the language is specifically designed for MI).

A nice alternative to Multiple Inheritance is called Traits. It allows you to mix together various units of behavior into a single class. A compiler can support traits as a compile-time extension to the single-inheritance type system. You simply declare that class X includes traits A, B, and C, and the compiler puts the traits you ask for together to form the implementation of X.

For example, suppose you are trying to implement IList(of T). If you look at different implementations of IList(of T), they often share some of the exact same code. That's were traits come in. You just declare a trait with the common code in it and you can use that common code in any implementation of IList(of T) -- even if the implementation already has some other base class. Here's what the syntax might look like:

/// This trait declares default methods of IList<T>
public trait DefaultListMethods<T> : IList<T>
{
    // Methods without bodies must be implemented by another 
    // trait or by the class
    public void Insert(int index, T item);
    public void RemoveAt(int index);
    public T this[int index] { get; set; }
    public int Count { get; }

    public int IndexOf(T item)
    {
        EqualityComparer<T> comparer = EqualityComparer<T>.Default;
        for (int i = 0; i < Count; i++)
            if (comparer.Equals(this[i], item))
                return i;
        return -1;
    }
    public void Add(T item)
    {
        Insert(Count, item);
    }
    public void Clear()
    {   // Note: the class would be allowed to override the trait 
        // with a better implementation, or select an 
        // implementation from a different trait.
        for (int i = Count - 1; i >= 0; i--)
            RemoveAt(i);
    }
    public bool Contains(T item)
    {
        return IndexOf(item) != -1;
    }
    public void CopyTo(T[] array, int arrayIndex)
    {
        foreach (T item in this)
            array[arrayIndex++] = item;
    }
    public bool IsReadOnly
    {
        get { return false; }
    }
    public bool Remove(T item)
    {
        int i = IndexOf(item);
        if (i == -1)
            return false;
        RemoveAt(i);
        return true;
    }
    System.Collections.IEnumerator 
        System.Collections.IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
    {
        return GetEnumerator();
    }
    IEnumerator<T> GetEnumerator()
    {
        for (int i = 0; i < Count; i++)
            yield return this[i];
    }
}

And you use the trait like this:

class MyList<T> : MyBaseClass, DefaultListMethods<T>
{
    public void Insert(int index, T item) { ... }
    public void RemoveAt(int index)       { ... }
    public T this[int index] {
        get { ... }
        set { ... }
    }
    public int Count {
        get { ... }
    }
}

Of course, I'm just scratching the surface here. For a more complete description, see the paper Traits: Composable Units of Behavior (PDF).

The Rust language (from Mozilla) has implemented Traits in an interesting way: they noticed that traits are similar to default interface implementations, so they unified interfaces and traits into a single feature (which they call traits). The main difference between traits and default interface implementations (which Java now has) is that traits can contain private or protected methods, unlike traditional interface methods that must be public. If traits and interfaces are not unified into a single feature, then another difference is that you can have a reference to an interface, but you can't have a reference to a trait; a trait is not itself a type.

3
  • Interesting suggestion. How is this different to using a helper class or aggregation? Oct 13, 2008 at 7:54
  • How could you implement IList with aggregation or helper class (assuming you already have a base class that doesn't implement IList)? Without traits you'd still have the burden of implementing every method of IList. Besides, there are other benefits of traits--you'd have to read the paper.
    – Qwertie
    Nov 10, 2009 at 0:53
  • 1
    I also think that traits would be a great addition to C#, and that it would completely supercede the need for multiple inheritance. There's already research to add traits to C#: scg.unibe.ch/archive/projects/Reic05a.pdf Let's just hope that one day it comes to fruition.
    – Jordão
    Apr 26, 2010 at 15:19
7

I actually miss multiple inheritance for one specific reason... the dispose pattern.

EVERY time that I need to implement the dispose pattern, I say to myself: "I wish I could just derive from a class that implements the dispose pattern with a few virtual overrides." I copy and paste the same boiler-plate code into every class that implements IDispose and I hate it.

2
  • 1
    Great example of a positive example use of MI ! Jul 14, 2010 at 19:56
  • 3
    Actually, what I realized is that I don't need multiple inheritance... what I really need is mix-ins. THAT would let me bring in the Dispose pattern code without needing multiple inheritance. Jul 15, 2010 at 0:50
5

I would argue against multiple inheritance simply for the reason you state. Developers will misuse it. I've seen enough problems with every class inheriting from a utility class, just so you can call a function from every class without needing to type so much, to know that multiple inheritance would lead to bad code in many situations. The same thing could be said about GoTo, which is one of the reasons it's use is so frowned upon. I think that multiple inheritance does have some good uses, just like GoTo, In an ideal world, where they were both only used when appropriately, there would be no problems. However, the world is not ideal, so we must protect bad programmers from themselves.

5
  • Microsoft made similar assumptions when they introduced VB. They assumed that developers were not smart enough to design good code so the language was dumbed down accordingly. I personally found this offensive and steered away from VB and towards more expressive languages. Oct 10, 2008 at 15:04
  • However, VB.Net has now extended to the point where it is basically has every feature of C#.
    – Kibbee
    Oct 10, 2008 at 15:12
  • 3
    Crippling a langauge to keep developers safe isn't really a good design principle. That's a problem that Java has (nothing but classes and interfaces so it's easy to understand...). Oct 10, 2008 at 22:03
  • 3
    Read Stroustrup's book on Design and Evolution. He has an uncompromising stand on this: nothing will be kept out of the language just because it will be misused. He was aiming for the competent programmer (and, frankly, I don't want incompetents writing programs anyway). Oct 28, 2009 at 14:22
  • Nobody wants 'incompetents writing programs'... Unfortunately in the real world a lot of 'incompetents' do, and when they quit or get fired and your get stuck with their masterpieces I'm sure you'll be glad these 'incompetents' at least didn't have MI to mess around with...
    – Dean Kuga
    Jun 3, 2010 at 22:44
5

YES! YES! and YES!

Seriously, I've been developing GUI libraries my entire career, and MI (Multiple Inheritance) makes this FAR easier than SI (Single Inheritance)

First I did SmartWin++ in C++ (MI heavily used) then I did Gaia Ajax and finally now Ra-Ajax and I can with extreme confident state that MI rules for some places. One of those places being GUI libraries...

And the arguments claiming that MI "is too complex" and such are mostly put there by people trying to construct language wars and happens to belong to the camp which "currently doesn't have MI"...

Just like functional programming languages (like Lisp) have been taught (by the "non-Lispers") as "too complex" by non-functional programming language advocates...

People are afraid of the unknown...

MI RULES!

1
  • Having multiple inheritance would require that the system disallow run-time loading or creation of classes that derive from one's classes but which weren't available at build time, have upcasts and downcasts change an object's identity, or sometimes have an instances of a class derived from one which overrides and seals a virtual method use a different override for that method. None of those sound very appetizing. For what purpose is interface inheritance insufficient?
    – supercat
    Sep 27, 2013 at 16:52
3

I'm happy that C# does not have Multiple Inheritance, even though it would sometimes be convenient. What I would like to see instead is the ability to provide a default implementation of an interface method. That is:

interface I
{
    void F();
    void G();
}


class DefaultI : I
{
    void F() { ... }
    void G() { ... }
}

class C : I = DefaultI
{
    public void F() { ... } // implements I.F
}

In this case, ((I)new C()).F() will call C's implementation of I.F(), while ((I)new C()).G() will call DefaultI's implementation of I.G().

There are a number of issues that the language designers would have to work out before this could be added to the language, but none that are very hard, and the result would cover many of the needs that make Multiple Inheritance desirable.

5
  • 1
    How is that not the same thing as multiple inheritance?
    – xian
    Oct 9, 2009 at 22:52
  • @kitchen: It is multiple inheritance, but only of interfaces, which is already allowed in C#. It doesn't bump in to any of the MI issues that come from inheriting implementation.
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Oct 10, 2009 at 4:52
  • 1
    It does, though, if you're allowing them to provide a default interface (a default implementation) i.e: "class Foo : IBar = Bar, IBaz = Baz { ... }"
    – xian
    Oct 10, 2009 at 23:44
  • 1
    @Jay: I agree with kitchen: what you are asking for is multiple inheritance. It is inheritance of interface, inheritance of behavior, and represents an IS-A relationship. Inheritance in C++ is precisely that. I am interested in understanding what you think MI actually is, if not this. Oct 28, 2009 at 14:27
  • C IS-A I, but AINT-NO DefaultI. You can inherit from multiple interfaces in C# already, but only from one base class, and I'm not proposing a change to that rule.
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Oct 30, 2009 at 4:19
2

I have been working with C# since it was first available as an alpha/beta release and have never missed multiple inheritance. MI is nice for some things but there are almost always other ways to achieve the same result (some of which actually end up being simpler or creating an easier to understand implementation).

1
  • 3
    Not sure I agree. There are situations where MI produces far more elegant solutions than is possible with any of the alterantive techniques discussed in this thread. It does need to be used in right situation and can be abused, but then again so can any of tools in C#s toolbox (extension methods?) Oct 13, 2008 at 7:37
2

Multiple inheritance in general can be useful and many OO languages implement it one way or another (C++, Eiffel, CLOS, Python...). Is it essential? No. Is it nice to have? Yes.

2
  • The same can be said about any programming language feature. Contrast C# with assember - all C#'s features are not essential, just REALLY nice to have. Oct 13, 2008 at 7:48
  • True. All programming language features are nice to have. Oct 13, 2008 at 13:31
2

Update
I challenge everyone who votes me down to show me any example of multiple inheritance that I can't easily port to a language with single inheritance. Unless anyone can show any such sample, I claim it does not exist. I have ported tons of C++ code (MH) to Java (no-MH) and that was never a problem, no matter how much MH the C++ code used.


Nobody could ever prove so far that multiple inheritance has any advantage over other techniques you mentioned in your post (using interfaces and delegates I can get exactly the same result without much code or overhead), while it has a couple of well known disadvantages (diamond problem being the most annoying ones).

Actually multiple inheritance is usually abused. If you use OO design to somehow model the real world into classes, you will never get to the point where multiple inheritance makes actually sense. Can you provide a useful example for multiple inheritance? Most of the examples I've seen so far are actually "wrong". They make something a subclass, that is in fact just an extra property and thus actually an interface.

Take a look at Sather. It is a programming language, where interfaces do have multiple inheritance, as why not (it can't create a diamond problem), however classes that are no interfaces have no inheritance whatsoever. They can only implement interfaces and they can "include" other objects, which makes these other objects a fixed part of them, but that is not the same as inheritance, it's rather a form of delegation (method calls "inherited" by including objects are in fact just forwarded to instances of these objects encapsulated in your object). I think this concept is pretty interesting and it shows you can have a complete clean OO language without any implementation inheritance at all.

4
  • I agree that is has its complexities (diamond problem being one of them) but it is not possible to fully express multiple inheritance with interfaces, composition or extensions methods (or some combination there of). Oct 10, 2008 at 15:18
  • It may only need you sometimes have to write a little bit more code, but the functionality is absolutely equal. I've ported tons of C++ apps to Java, C++ has MH, Java not, it never was a problem to port any of these, I have the same classes and same interfaces (and just some extra classes)
    – Mecki
    Oct 10, 2008 at 15:24
  • It's not a question of getting it to work, it's a question of getting the code you want. I gave an example where MI would help me (wanting to add methods to released interfaces that can't change -- easy to do with abstract classes, but only if MI is available).
    – Lou Franco
    Oct 10, 2008 at 15:59
  • @Lou: You don't need MI for that. Okay, I think Java can't do that, but Objective-C can do that (we regularly extend Apple's own classes with own methods) and Objective-C has no MI.
    – Mecki
    Oct 21, 2008 at 17:42
2

one of the truly nice and (at the time) novel things about the DataFlex 4GL v3+ (I know, I know, Data what?) was its support for mixin inheritance - the methods from any other classes could be reused in your class; as long as your class provided the properties that these methods used, it worked just fine, and there was no "diamond problem" or other multiple-inheritance "gotchas" to worry about.

i would like to see something like this in C# as it would simplify certain kinds of abstraction and contruction issues

2

Instead of multiple inheritance, you can use mixins which is a better solution.

1

I think it would over-complicate things without providing enough ROI. We already see people butcher .NET code with too-deep inheritance trees. I can just imagine the atrocities if people had the power to do multiple inheritance.

I won't deny that it has potential, but I just don't see enough benefit.

1
  • Are you arguing for the compiler to have a hard limit on class inheritance depth? Oct 10, 2008 at 22:05
1

While there are certainly instances where it can be useful, I have found that most of the time when I think I need it, I really don't.

1

A colleague wrote this blog about how to get something like multiple inheritance in C# with Dynamic Compilation:

http://www.atalasoft.com/cs/blogs/stevehawley/archive/2008/09/29/late-binding-in-c-using-dynamic-compilation.aspx

1

I think its simple really. Just like any other complex programming paradigm, you can misuse it and hurt yourself. Can you misuse objects (oh yes!), but that doesn't mean OO is bad in itself.

Similarly with MI. If you do not have a large 'tree' of inherited classes, or a lot of classes that provide the same named methods, then you will be perfectly fine with MI. In fact, as MI provides the implementation, you'll often be better off than a SI implementation where you have to re-code, or cut&paste methods to delegated objects. Less code is better in these cases.. you can make an almighty mess of sharing code by trying to re-use objects through interface inheritance. And such workarounds don't smell right.

I think the single-inheritance model of .NET is flawed: they should have gone with interfaces only, or MI only. Having "half and half" (ie single implementation inheritance plus multiple interface inheritance) is more confusing than it should be, and not elegant at all.

I come from a MI background, and I'm not scared of or burnt by it.

1

I have posted this here a couple of times but I just think it is really cool. You can learn how to fake MI here. I also think the article highlights why MI is such a pain even if that was not intended.

I neither miss it or need it, I prefer to use composition of objects to achieve my ends. That is really the point of the article as well.

1
  • The article mentions precisely one problem with MI: the diamond pattern. To avoid the possibility of that, it goes into detail on fairly complicated work-arounds to implement MI. I'm not impressed with the reasoning: wouldn't it be simpler just to have MI and say "DON'T DO THE DIAMOND!"? Oct 28, 2009 at 14:31
1

I've used multiple inheritence in C++ myself too, but you really have to know what you're doing in order to not get yourself in trouble, especially if you have two base classes which share a grandparent. Then you can get into issues with virtual inheritence, having to declare every constructor you're going to call down the chain (which makes binary reuse much harder)... it can be a mess.

More importantly, the way the CLI is currently built precludes MI from being implemented easily. I'm sure they could do it if they wanted, but I have other things I'd rather see in the CLI than multiple inheritence.

Things I'd like to see include some features of Spec#, like non-nullable reference types. I'd also like to see more object safety by being able to declare parameters as const, and the ability to declare a function const (meaning that you are guaranteeing that the internal state of an object won't be changed by the method and the compiler double checks you).

I think that between Single Inheritence, Multiple Interface Inheritence, Generics, and Extension Methods, you can do pretty much anything you need to. If anything could improve things for someone desiring MI, I think some sort of language construct which would would allow easier aggregation and composition is needed. That way you can have a shared interface, but then delegate your implementation to a private instance of the class you would normally inherit from. Right now, that takes a lot of boiler plate code to do. Having a more automated language feature for that would help significantly.

1

I prefer C++. I've used Java, C#, etc. As my programs get more sophisticated in such an OO environment, I find myself missing Multiple Inheritance. That's my subjective experience.

It can make for amazing spaghetti code...it can make for amazingly elegant code.

1

I believe languages like C# should give the programmer the option. Just because it maybe too complicated does not mean it will be too complicated. Programming languages should provide the developer with tools to build anything the programmer wants to.

You choose to use those API's a developer already wrote, you dont have too.

1

Give C# implicits and you will not miss multiple inheritance, or any inheritance for that matter.

1

No I do not. I use all other OO features to develop what I want. I use Interface and object encapsulation and I am never limited on what I want to do.

1

I try not to use inheritance. The less I can everytime.

1

No unless Diamond problem is solved. and you can use composition till this is not solved.

1

No, we came away from it. You do need it now.

0

If we introduce Multiple Inheritance then we are again facing the old Diamond problem of C++...

However for those who think it's unavoidable we can still introduce multiple inheritance effects by means of composition (Compose multiple objects in an object and expose public methods which delegate responsibilities to composed object and return)...

So why bother to have multiple inheritance and make your code vulnerable to unavoidable exceptions...

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