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Note: This is similar, but not quite the same as this other question

I've implemented an IBusinessCollection interface. It dervies from both ICollection<T>, and the old-busted non-generic ICollection. I'd prefer to just dump the old busted ICollection, but I'm using WPF databinding with a CollectionView which wants me to implement the old-busted non-generic IList :-(

Anyway, the interfaces look like this:

public interface IBusinessCollection<T> : ICollection<T>, ICollection
{ }

public interface ICollection<T>
{ int Count { get; } }

public interface ICollection
{ int Count { get; } }

Due to using Dependency Injection, I'm passing around objects of type IBusinessCollection<T> using their interfaces, not by concrete types, so I have something like this:

internal class AnonymousCollection : IBusinessCollection<string>
{ 
    public int Count { get { return 5; } }
}

public class Factory
{
    public static IBusinessCollection<string> Get()
    { return new AnonymousCollection(); }
}

When I try and call this code, I get an error, as follows:

var counter = Factory.Get();
counter.Count; // Won't compile
// Ambiguity between 'ICollection<string>.Count' and 'ICollection.Count'

There are 3 ways to make this compile, but all of them are ugly.

  1. Cast the class to it's concrete implementation (which I may not know)

  2. Cast the class explicitly to ICollection

  3. Cast the class explicitly to ICollection<T>

Is there a fourth option which doesn't require me to cast things at all? I can make whatever changes I need to IBusinessCollection<T>

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78% accept rate
Why not implement both interfaces explicitly, and the common ones directly? It still makes it possible "to program against an interface, not against an implementation" from the outside. – Cecil Has a Name 2 days ago

2 Answers

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This appears to solve the issues in my quick tests.

public interface IBusinessCollection<T> : ICollection<T>, ICollection
{
    new int Count { get;  }
}
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This works perfectly. Thanks! – Orion Edwards Oct 12 at 3:52
PS. Didn't know you could do 'new' in interfaces. That's nice :-) – Orion Edwards Oct 12 at 3:53
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ICollection<string> counter = Factory.Get();
counter.Count; // No longer ambiguous
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I don't think this actually solves the problem. In my sample code, I get the ambiguity error with var or the explicit IBusinessCollection<string> type. – bobbymcr Oct 12 at 3:09
The question requested a fourth option. He already knew about this possibility. – John Fisher Oct 12 at 3:09
I still get the ambiguity err. – Corbin March Oct 12 at 3:09
1  
@John: of course he can. He knows he's getting an IBusinessObject<string>. This interface implements ICollection<string>. Contrary to popular believe var is not variant! It's a static type that is in this case being resolved at compile time to IBusinessCollection<string>, which has two properties defined in two seperate subinterfaces that have the same name. Using one or the other if possible removes the ambiguity. – Matthew Scharley Oct 12 at 3:25
1  
I don't want to cast it or have to explicitly state the type. I just want to use var and have clean code. As far as that goes, ICollection<string> counter is the same as var counter = (ICollection<string>), and doesn't solve the issue – Orion Edwards Oct 12 at 3:56
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