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I have a generic class that I'm trying to implement implicit type casting for. While it mostly works, it won't work for interface casting. Upon further investigation, I found that there is a compiler error: "User-defined conversion from interface" that applies. While I understand that this should be enforced in some cases, what I'm trying to do does seem like a legitimate case.

Here's an example:

public class Foo<T> where T : IBar
{
    private readonly T instance;

    public Foo(T instance)
    {
        this.instance = instance;
    }
    public T Instance
    {
        get { return instance; }
    }
    public static implicit operator Foo<T>(T instance)
    {
        return new Foo<T>(instance);
    }
}

Code to use it:

var concreteReferenceToBar = new ConcreteBar();
IBar intefaceReferenceToBar = concreteReferenceToBar;
Foo<ConcreteBar> concreteFooFromConcreteBar = concreteReferenceToBar;
Foo<IBar> fooFromConcreteBar = concreteReferenceToBar;
Foo<IBar> fooFromInterfaceBar = intefaceReferenceToBar; // doesn't work

Does anyone know a workaround, or can anyone explain in a satisfactory way why I shuouldn't be able to cast interfaceReferenceToBar implicitly to Foo<IBar>, since in my case it is not being converted, but only contained within Foo?

EDIT: It looks like covariance might offer salvation. Let's hope the C# 4.0 specification allows for implicit casting of interface types using covariance.

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38% accept rate
(not for this post, but +1 for your answers (comments) on my answer stackoverflow.com/questions/438587) – Marc Gravell Jan 13 '09 at 21:44
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2 Answers

up vote 17 down vote accepted

The reason you can't do this is because it is specifically forbidden in the C# language specification:

A class or struct is permitted to declare a conversion from a source type S to a target type T provided all of the following are true:

  • ...
  • Neither S nor T is object or an interface-type.

and

User-defined conversions are not allowed to convert from or to interface-types. In particular, this restriction ensures that no user-defined transformations occur when converting to an interface-type, and that a conversion to an interface-type succeeds only if the object being converted actually implements the specified interface-type.

Source

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I understand that it's part of the specification, implicit casting of an interface should be invalid in some cases, but in all? – Michael Meadows Sep 27 '08 at 12:59
I agree with you, I don't know why they made it invalid for all cases. In this case you can determine at compile time that the cast is (should be) valid. – Adam Hughes Sep 27 '08 at 13:41
I believe that the restriction on implicit interface casting has to do with how COM interop is implemented. COM uses QueryInterface, which .NET handles automatically. Allowing implicit interface conversion would interfere. – Mark Oct 7 '10 at 13:48
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Adam is right, there's no straight way to user-cast from or to interfaces.

Anyway I recently had a similar problem and I solved it creating a proxy that calls the interface's methods via reflection. You can find a documented example in my article "Interfaces: proxying wins 1-0 over casting".

Hope this helps.

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