to be honest- ive asked (a part of this question) here but now i have a different - related question.
public class Base
{
public void Foo(IEnumerable<string> strings) { }
}
public class Child : Base
{
public void Foo(IEnumerable<object> objects) { }
}
List<string> lst = new List<string>();
lst.Add("aaa");
Child c = new Child();
c.Foo(lst);
(n C# 3 it will call : Base.Foo
in C# 4 it will call : Child.Foo
)
Im in FW4 ! , lets talk about it
with all the respect to covariance :
when I write c.Foo(lst);
( lst
is IEnumerable
of STRING !) -
it sees both signatures !!! but STILL - it chooses IEnumerable<object>
??
does covariance stronger than the concrete type itself ?
c.Foo((IEnumerable<string>)lst)
in your situation, neither signature is a match for the actual concrete type so you should make no assumptions. (The answer below gives the rationale from the spec for the choice, which apparently is different from 3.0, but in these grey areas I prefer just to explicitly define the behavior with a cast)Child
.