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I just want to confirm what I've understood about Generics in C#. This has come up in a couple code bases I've worked in where a generic base class is used to create type-safe derived instances. A very simple example of what I'm talking about,

public class SomeClass<T>
{
    public virtual void SomeMethod(){ }
}

public class DeriveFrom :SomeClass<string>
{
    public override void SomeMethod()
    {
        base.SomeMethod();
    }
}

The problem comes up when I then want to use derived instances in a polymorphic way.

public class ClientCode
{
    public void DoSomethingClienty()
    {
        Factory factory = new Factory();
        //Doesn't compile because SomeClass needs a type parameter!
        SomeClass someInstance = factory.Create();

        someInstance.SomeMethod();
    }
}

It seems that once you introduce a Generic into an inheritance hierarchy or interface, you can no longer use that family of classes in a polymorphic way except perhaps internal to itself. Is that true?

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1  
Seems to me that SomeClass<string> is the base class of DeriveFrom, not SomeClass, which is what you seem to believe it should be. – Thanatos Nov 29 at 6:58

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

As far as I can see, consuming code doesn't need specifics of generic class (i.e., it doesn't depends on what T is). So, why don't you introduce interface that SomeClass<T> will implement, and use instance of this interface.

E.g.:

public interface ISome
{
    void SomeMethod();
}

public class SomeClass<T>: ISome
{
    public virtual void SomeMethod(){ }
}

public void DoSomethingClienty()
{
    Factory factory = new Factory();
    ISome someInstance = factory.Create();

    someInstance.SomeMethod();
}

Now, subclasses of SomeClass<T> can operate differently on different Ts, but consuming code won't change.

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I think this is the best solution. We extend only the interface the client cares about and we hide the generics under the hood. – Nick Swarr Nov 29 at 14:14
vote up 5 vote down

I think you are misunderstanding the point of generics. Generics allows you to generalise a class that requires a type, but doesn't particularly care itself what type that is. For instance, a List<string> is a list of strings, but what would a List be? It's a rather useless concept to have a list of nothing.

Each specialised class (ie, List<string>) is it's own distinct type, and the compiler treats it as such. It is possible to get at the generic type itself (typeof(List<>) for instance), but in most cases it's useless, and you certainly can't make an instance of it.

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vote up 2 vote down

I would prefer using abstract class to act as base of all generic types.

public abstract class SomeClass {
            public abstract void SomeMethod();
        }

        public class SomeClass<T> : SomeClass
        {
            public override void SomeMethod() { }            
        }

        public class DeriveFrom<String> : SomeClass<String>
        {
            public override void SomeMethod() { base.SomeMethod(); }            
        }
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Indeed, but how would Factory work here? – Jeremy McGee Nov 29 at 8:58
Have no idea about the implementation of "Factory" mentioned by Nick. But i am quite sure, it can very well be implemented in the abstract non-generic 'SomeClass'. – Amby Nov 30 at 5:56

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