Although there are quite a lot of Q&As regarding IDisposable to be found on SO, I haven't found an answer to this yet:
I usually follow the practice that when one of my classes owns an IDisposable object then it also implements IDisposable and calls Dispose on the owned object. However recently I came across a class which implemented IDisposable explicitly thus preventing me from directly calling Dispose forcing me to cast it which I found annoying and unnecessary.
So the question: Why and when would one want to use an explicit interface implementation of IDisposable? I know that there are perfectly good and valid reason for implementing an interface explicitly but in regards to IDisposable the reason is not quite clear to me.
IDisposableas well? And why is it "annoying" to cast an object toIDisposable? – chiccodoro Apr 7 '11 at 7:09