1

This question is similar to this one. The difference is that I'd like to have two base classes.

Example:

public class Circle
{
    private string _radius { get; set; }

    public Circle Radius(string radius)
    {
        _radius = radius;
        return this;
    }
}

public class Box
{
    private string _width { get; set; }

    public Circle Width(string width)
    {
        _width = width;
        return this;
    }
}

public class CircleAndBox : Circle, Box // Can't do in c#
{
    // should contain methods from both Circle and Box, but return CircleAndBox
}

Maybe Circle and Box was not the best example. Basically they represent classes with different properties and methods. Class CircleAndBox just happens to have the same properties and methods as both Circle and Box. CircleAndBox may have additional properties and methods that do not exist neither in Circle nor in Box.

Desired Result

I should be able to write:

var circle = new Circle().Radius("5");
var box = new Box().Width("6");
var circleAndBox = new CircleAndBox().Radius("5").Width("6");

It would be Super if:

When I add a method to Circle or Box class, I should not touch CircleAndBox class. Just like with regular inheritance from a single class, CircleAndBox should automatically inherit all public methods from both Circle and Box

8
  • 1
    Interfaces interfaces interfaces... What do you need both for? What is a Circle + box? If its a circle in a box then the circles radius is half the boxes width?
    – Sayse
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:38
  • .Width("6")?? and what about .Width("BigFat")??
    – Fede
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:39
  • new CircleAndBox().Radius("5").Width("6"); That's so fluent, I don't even understand what it's meant to mean.
    – spender
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:41
  • @spender it would work if Radius returned a CircleAndBox :P (doubt it!)
    – Sayse
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:42
  • 2
    CircleAndBox sounds like a fantastic violation of the Liskov Substitution Principle.
    – David
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:49

4 Answers 4

4

Have CircleAndBox inherit from neither class, but rather reference objects of those classes. It will have to redefine the methods from each class. You can add implicit conversions to Circle and Box to allow it to be used in contexts where references to those objects are expected.

public class CircleAndBox
{
    public Circle Circle { get; private set; }
    public Box Box { get; private set; }

    public CircleAndBox()
    {
        Circle = new Circle();
        Box = new Box();
    }

    public CircleAndBox Radius(string radius)
    {
        Circle.Radius(radius);
        return this;
    }

    public CircleAndBox Width(string width)
    {
        Box.Width(width);
        return this;
    }

    public static implicit operator Circle(CircleAndBox self)
    {
        return self == null ? null : self.Circle;
    }

    public static implicit operator Box(CircleAndBox self)
    {
        return self == null ? null : self.Box;
    }
}

Note that the implicit conversions will not preserve the type of the object, so one should not use this technique to pass a CircleAndBox to a method taking a Box and expect the result on the other side to be a CircleAndBox.

CircleAndBox cb = new CircleAndBox();

// Implicit conversion, b contains a Box object.
Box b = cb;

// Compile-time error CS0030.
cb = (CircleAndBox)b;
4
  • please see updated section "It would be Super if:" of the question. I understand that your solution does not take care of that? Aug 2, 2013 at 22:09
  • @Dmitry C# does not have multiple inheritance, so what you ask is not possible without exclusively using interfaces and automatically providing the delegating methods via a proxy type at runtime.
    – cdhowie
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:11
  • that sounded smart :) really, I didn't quite understand what you said. Are you suggesting there still is a way to do it, but it is way too complex? Aug 2, 2013 at 22:15
  • @Dmitry The only way you could do this without also implementing each method on CircleAndBox would be to create only interface ICircleAndBox : IBox, ICircle { } and then emit an implementation for this interface at runtime. Or by writing a build task that would inspect the other two interfaces and generate a C# source file implementing the interface. Either way, probably more work than repeating each implementation.
    – cdhowie
    Aug 2, 2013 at 22:19
2

Inheritance means "is a".

Ball is a RoundThing. Circle is a RoundThing. Box is a SquareThing. Lamborghini is a Car, and Car is a Transport. Bus and Bicycle are also Transports.

If it isn't a "is a" relation, it is not inheritance. And in this is the explanation why multiple inheritance is not supported in C# and Java, and it is discouraged by most people I know in C++. An object is almost never two things at once.

Do not misuse inheritance simply to save code lines. Even if saving code lines was a legitimate goal (which I do not agree with), it is not even necessary. Two other constructs can help you here.

First, about the relation. What you are looking for is a totally different relation. Not "is a", but "can be used as". That is where interfaces come in. Interfaces specify what an object can be used as. So you could have two interfaces IBox and ICircle. Your CircleAndBox thing could then implement both interfaces, thus specify that it can be used as both.

Second, you can use one more relation to make life easier. You will not save code lines. But you will make sure that your CircleAndBox always has the proper behaviour, defined in the Circle and Box classes. For that, you can use aggregation, together with the delegation pattern. Aggregation is a relation that says "has a". So make your CircleAndBox class have a private Circle object and a private Box object, then implement the ICircle and IBox interfaces simply by calling the respective method/property/event on the respective private objects, and return what they return.

Presto, you have a class that has a (aggregation) Circle and Box instance to actually pass the work to, which exposes these by having the same methods (delegation), and which thus can be used as (interface) a Circle and as a Box.

1
  • I do not care about saving code lines much. I rather care about maintainability. Good write up! +1 Aug 3, 2013 at 0:24
1

Use interfaces:

IBox and ICircle

public interface IBox
{
    Circle Width(string width)
}

public interface ICircle
{
    Circle Radius(string radius)
}

public class Circle : ICircle
{
    private int _radius { get; set; }

    public Circle Radius(string radius)
    {
        _radius = radius;
        return this;
    }
}

public class Box : IBox
{
    private int _width { get; set; }

    public Circle Width(string width)
    {
        _width = width;
        return this;
    }
}

public class CircleAndBox : ICircle, IBox
{
    // should contain methods from both Circle and Box, but return CircleAndBox
}
3
  • (string Width) is still a bad idea, no matter what. string is not an appropiate data type to represent sizes.
    – Fede
    Aug 2, 2013 at 21:41
  • That is just copy and paste from what they had and I agree. Aug 2, 2013 at 21:48
  • The reason I don't like this approach is that I'd still have to write implementation for every method of ICircle and IBox in CircleAndBox. Ideally I would like to avoid it. Aug 2, 2013 at 22:03
0

I don't think you can do exactly what you are expecting since C# (and .Net in general) does not support multiple inheritance of classes. You can inherit from one class and implement an interface.

For instance:

interface iBox
{
  iBox Width(string width); //Assuming you want Box here and not Circle
}

Then you have Box

class Box : iBox ...

Now you can have

public class CircleAndBox : Circle, iBox
{
private Box _helper;
public iBox Width(string width) { _helper.Width(width); return this; }
}

This isn't exactly what you want, but it is about as close as C# allows I think. If you are willing to use weak types, there is also a delegation method for passing things to _helper without explicitly implementing each method. However, with direct delegation, you would not return your CircleAndBox object but the _helper object instead. I am not certain that would serve the purpose.

Also, this would not work if you don't control at least one of the classes you are looking to inherit.

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