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I want to know if its possible to hide a base class property from a derived class:

Example:

    class BaseDocument
    {
        public string DocPath{get; set;}
        public string DocContent{get; set;}
    } 

    class DerviedDocument: BaseDocument
    {
     //this class should not get the DocContent property
        public Test()
        {
           DerivedDocument d = new DerivedDocument();
           d.//intellisense should only show me DocPath
             //I do not want this class to see the DocContent property
        }
    }

I cannot make the the Docproperty private, because i want to instantiate the BaseDocument class elsewhere and use the property there. Thats will kill the idea of a property anyway.

One way to fix this would be to use a interface, say IDoc, which exposes DocPath property and make both the BaseDocument and DerivedDocument implement the interface. This will break their parent-child relationship though.

I can play with the new and override keywords, but thats not the right way either because the child still 'sees' the property

I tried using the 'sealed' keyword on the DocContent, but that does not seem to solve the problem either.

I understand that it 'breaks' inheritance, but I guess this scenario should be coming up frequently where a child needs to get everything else from the parent but one of two properties and the parent has been declared as a base class.

How can such scenarios be handled gracefully?

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75% accept rate
Why do you want to do this? – ChaosPandion Aug 27 '09 at 4:30
i have an existing scenario something similar to the question. And plus, I am just curious to know! – desigeek Aug 27 '09 at 4:32
Like others have mentioned... you shouldn't be deriving from the base if this is the case. Derived classes are supposed to fully support the base class interface. If my program works with CBase, it's behavior should be unaltered even if I supply it with any CDerived for CBase - objectmentor.com/resources/articles/lsp.pdf – Gishu Aug 27 '09 at 5:11
-1 for Invalid Question. First of all C# and all Object Oriented programming languages are built upon standard set of pattern over years. The meaning of "Public" is really a public, and it should be available everywhere. You can not have a public where it can become private somewhere, try solving answer by interface, other patterns or internal keywords, but try to understand the Design of System is generic and for everyone it can not be changed for your small one time need. – Akash Kava Aug 27 '09 at 13:44
@Akash: If you read the question again, i already mention that I understand that it isnt a good design to use the approach, and I offer my own solutions to it. But what if you already had something like this from legacy code that you couldn't change and are stuck with that base class? How do you handle it then. Thats my question. So i think it still is a valid question in terms of practicality of a situation. – desigeek Aug 27 '09 at 14:27
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6 Answers

up vote 3 down vote accepted

I'm not sure inheritance would be the way to go here. Yes, you can hack around it by using the EditorBrowsableAttribute but I think the design should be rethought. One possible approach:

public interface IDoc
{
   DocPath{get;set;}
}

class BaseDocument : IDoc
{
     public DocPath{get; set;}
     public DocContent{get; set;}
} 

class DerviedDocument
{
    public DerivedDocument(IDoc doc)
    {
        this.Doc = doc;
    }

    public IDoc Doc{get;set;}

     public Test()
     {
        DerivedDocument d = new DerivedDocument(new BaseDocument());
        d.//here you will only see d.IDoc which only exposes DocPath

     }
}

Basically, use composition instead of inheritance, and program to an interface, not to an implementation.

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Nice, that's a good solution – Andy White Aug 27 '09 at 4:51
1  
You should also change the name DerivedDocument to prevent misunderstandings.. – Gishu Aug 27 '09 at 5:06
feedback

It sounds like you want to intentionally violate the Liskov Substitution Principle. Why bother with subclassing at all if it's not going to have the conventional inheritance semantics? Just make a separate class.

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You can do it easily if you don't mind having BaseDocument and DerivedDocument in different assemblies/projects.

Make DocContent internal. It'll be visible to everything in the same project as BaseDocument, but it won't be visible to DerivedDocument since that's in a different project. Of course, you'll need to make BaseDocument public (right now you have it as the default, internal).

In first project:

public class BaseDocument
{
    public string DocPath {get; set;}
    internal string DocContent {get; set;}
}

In second project that references first:

class DerivedDocument : FirstProject.BaseDocument
{
    public Test()
    {
       DerivedDocument d = new DerivedDocument();
       d.  //intellisense shows DocPath, but not DocContent
    }
}

This solution has the advantage of not being a kludge. You can still use BaseDocument's DocContent property within BaseDocument's project. If you need to use DocContent in another project (separate from the project DerivedDocument is in), you can use the InternalsVisibleTo attribute to make DocContent visible to that assembly. (That, however, is in my opinion a kludge, albeit a very handy one in some scenarios.)

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+1 this is very nice but it breaks all of the idea of a class that should be in one file. Not the fact but it works. – Jonathan Shepherd Aug 27 '09 at 5:04
Sorry...it breaks what idea? It's two separate classes, one inheriting from the other. I don't know what idea you're talking about. – Kyralessa Aug 27 '09 at 13:07
feedback
interface IBaseDocument
{
    string DocPath    { get ; set ; }
    string DocContent { get ; set ; }
} 

class BaseDocument : IBaseDocument
{
    public string DocPath { get ; set ; } // implement normally

    private string MyDocContent ;   // use this in BaseDocument
    string IBaseDocument.DocContent // implement explicitly
    { 
        get { return MyDocContent  ; } 
        set { MyDocContent = value ; } 
    }
} 

class DerviedDocument : BaseDocument
{
    public void Test ()
    {
       // error: The name 'DocContent' does not exist in the current context
       Console.WriteLine (DocContent) ; 
    }
}
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+1 : Lovely solution. – Kyle Rozendo Aug 27 '09 at 5:05
3  
The only problem with this approach is that if you cast DerivedDocument to an IBaseDocument (which is a safe cast since it inhertis from BaseDocument which implements IBaseDocument) you'll now be able to see DocContent. – BFree Aug 27 '09 at 5:15
feedback

I don't believe there is a good (or any) way to do this. You may have to break the hierarchy, or you could remove the DocContent property from BaseDocument, then derive two sepearate classes from BaseDocument, one which is your current DerivedDocument, and another which has the DocContent property.

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Just do this.

class BaseDocument
{
    public DocPath{get; set;}
    public virtual DocContent{get; set;}
} 

class DerviedDocument: BaseDocument
{
    public override DocContent 
    { 
        get { return null; }
        set { } 
    }    
}

Or

public override DocContent 
{ 
    get { throw new NotImplementedException("Do not use this property!"); }
    set { throw new NotImplementedException("Do not use this property!"); } 
}
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@Chaos: -1 becuase what you gave is a work around, the first one of which i think won't work, though i am not sure. I already posted better work arounds in my question. And the problem still remains because the derived class 'sees' the base class property. My question was related to hiding it completely. – desigeek Aug 27 '09 at 14:37
Thanks for commenting. I am just really having trouble understanding why you would want to do this. – ChaosPandion Aug 27 '09 at 15:31
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