Consider the following example. I have an interface MyInterface, and then two abstract classes MyAbstractClass1 and MyAbstractClass2. MyAbstractClass1 implements MyInterface, but MyAbstractClass2 does not.
Now I have three concrete classes.
- MyConcreteClass1 is derived from MyAbstractClass1 but does not implement MyInterface.
- MyConcreteClass2 is derived from MyAbstractClass2, but does implement MyInterface.
- MyConcreteClass3 is derived from MyAbstractClass1, and does implement MyInterface.
Does ConcreteClass1 also implicitly implement MyInterface because it derives from MyAbstractClass1? Assuming MyAbstractClass1 implements the methods of MyInteface implicitly then ConcreteClass1 should not have to be cast to a MyInterface to access the MyInteface methods right?
MyAbstractClass1 can implicitly implement a method of MyInterface as an abstract method, but can't explicitly implement a method of MyInterface as an abstract method. Why is this?
Is MyConcreteClass3 excessive because it's implementing an interface that is already implemented by its base class? Would there be a reason you would want to do that even if you knew all classes that derive from MyAbstractClass1 should also implement MyInterface.
Here's a class diagram

Here's the code:
//interface
public interface MyInterface
{
void MyMethodA();
void MyMethodB();
void MyMethodC();
}
//abstract classes
public abstract class MyAbstractClass1 : MyInterface
{
public void MyMethodA()
{
}
void MyInterface.MyMethodB()
{
}
//Error: "the modifier abstract is not valid for this item"
//abstract void MyInterface.MyMethodC();
//This works
public abstract void MyMethodC();
public abstract void MyMethodZ();
}
public abstract class MyAbstractClass2
{
public void MyMethodX()
{
}
public abstract void MyMethodY();
}
//Concrete classes
//ConcreteClass 1: Only Abstract class implements the interface
public class ConcreteClass1 : MyAbstractClass1
{
public override void MyMethodC()
{
}
public override void MyMethodZ()
{
}
}
//ConcreteClass 1: Only Concrete class implements the interface
public class ConcreteClass2 : MyAbstractClass2, MyInterface
{
public override void MyMethodY()
{
}
public void MyMethodA()
{
}
public void MyMethodB()
{
}
public void MyMethodC()
{
}
}
//ConcreteClass 1: Both concrete and abstract class implement the interface
public class ConcreteClass3 : MyAbstractClass1, MyInterface
{
public override void MyMethodC()
{
}
public override void MyMethodZ()
{
}
}
