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I've just found that .NET Fx now has 3 useful interfaces:

  1. IReadOnlyCollection<T>
  2. IReadOnlyList<T>
  3. IReadOnlyDictionary<K,V>

And I'm bit confused why HashSet<T> do not implement IReadOnlyCollection<T>? Are there any reasons, or Microsoft just forgot about sets again?

UPD

After two-hours googling I've found that there are many collections in BCL which has .Count property but do not implement IReadOnlyCollection<T> interface.

UPD2

I've found this post http://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en/netfxbcl/thread/b4fb991a-3f5c-4923-93d4-7cd5c004f859 and the answer by Immo Landwerth where he've said following

Will other collections besides List<> and Dictionary<> be updated to support these interfaces?

Absolutely. In fact, all of our built-in collection types already implement IReadOnlyList<> and IReadOnlyDictionary<>. This means, you can directly pass an instance of List, T[] or Dictionary<> to an API that takes an IReadOnly-version of it.

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  • Ok, so why List<T> does?
    – hazzik
    Aug 7, 2012 at 16:18
  • Weird. Imho, an incongruent design decision. See infoq.com/news/2011/10/ReadOnly-WInRT Aug 7, 2012 at 16:21
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    @ColonelPanic You misunderstand the intention of IReadOnlyCollection<>. Most mutable collections implement this interface. The cool thing about it is that it's covariant. Therefore, if you know you're going to only read from a collection that goes into a method, you can make the method take an IReadOnlyCollection<Animal>. If someone has a List<Giraffe>, they can use it as input to your method because of covariance. That's really cool! Aug 7, 2012 at 16:54
  • Makes sense, cool. So the answer to the OP's question is 'Yes ISet should implement IReadOnlyCollection, this appears to be an oversight by devs' Aug 7, 2012 at 17:31
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    Update 2015: Fixed in .NET 4.6 Jul 30, 2015 at 14:02

1 Answer 1

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In version 4.5 of the framework, HashSet<T> does not implement IReadOnlyCollection<out T>.

This omission was resolved in version 4.6 of the framework (released almost 12 months after the above question was asked).

These corrections are not limited to HashSet<T>, other collections such as Stack<T> and Queue<T> have received these improvements.

Speculation on the reason for any omission is moot. It may be oversight or time pressure but frankly, it is of little consequence. I suspect that even direct input from the Microsoft Development Team would be somewhat subjective, even if we enjoy associated anecdotes.

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