3

I am currently developing an MVC 3 application with EF and the Repository pattern. I created a generic interface as follows:

interface IGenericRepository<T>
{
}

And an abstract class as follows:

abstract class GenericRepository<TContext ,T> : IGenericRepository<T>
    where TContext : DbContext, new()
{
}

After that my repo inherits both of them like this:

interface ICardRepository : IGenericRepository<Card>
{
}

and

class CardRepository : GenericRepository<EfContext, Card>, 
    ICardRepository
{
}

With Unity I register the interface and the class like this:

container.RegisterType<ICardRepository, CardRepository>();

Now the question is: can I use IGenericRepository instead of ICardRepository? Like this:

container.RegisterType<IGenericRepository<Card>, CardRepository>();

In theory I can, but as I still do not get how this pattern works I am not quite sure if I am not breaking or missing something.

1 Answer 1

1

One possible issue is now you will have to resolve IGenericRepository<Card>, instead of ICardRepository.

This will not work:

var cardRepository = container.Resolve<ICardRepository>();

Instead you will have to do this:

var cardRepository = container.Resolve<IGenericRepository<Card>>();

This also means that if you are doing something like constructor injection, you can't use:

public class SomethingDependentOnCardRepository
{
    // The parameter type should be IGenericRepository<Card> instead,
    // if you are using Unity to resolve this dependency.
    public SomethingDependentOnCardRepository(ICardRepository cardRepository)
    {
       // code
    }
}
6
  • Thanks for the answer. Actually I am aware of that. The point is if I use the interface like that am I breaking the pattern in some way? For example (I know that this is not the case) I might make testing harder if I use the generic interface.
    – Unknown
    Feb 4, 2012 at 16:05
  • Ah. I can't think of any potential problems with this. My only concern is what purpose would the ICardRepository interface serve at this point? Or would that be removed in the process? Feb 4, 2012 at 16:36
  • I want to get rid of that interface and instead use only the generic interface - it will save me from creating numerous copies of the same interface with different name like ICardRepository, ITagRepository, ISomethingElseRepository, which are basically the same.
    – Unknown
    Feb 4, 2012 at 16:42
  • If your repositories don't do anything why do you have them in the first place? This is the latest of a series of posts by Oren Eini (aka. Ayende Rahien) where he argues against the repository pattern. Google will give you more of his arguments. Feb 4, 2012 at 19:31
  • It does not matter what they do or they don't :) - I needed to know if I am breaking the pattern in some way. Actually IGenericRepository has the following methods: GetSingle, GetAll, Add, Remove. I know that repositories are disputable, but I have to stick to EF and besides that I have to develop the project in a tight timeframe. Later I can alter it in a better way, but for now I will stick to what I already (almost) know.
    – Unknown
    Feb 9, 2012 at 18:00

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