I know there's been several answers to this, and it's quite old now, but the simplest method to do this is just declare them as new private
.
Consider an example I am currently working on, where I have an API that makes available every method in a 3rd party DLL. I have to take their methods, but I want to use a .Net property, instead of a "getThisValue" and "setThisValue" method. So, I build a second class, inherit the first, make a property that uses the get and set methods, and then override the original get and set methods as private. They're still available to anyone wanting to build something different on them, but if they just want to use the engine I'm building, then they'll be able to use properties instead of methods.
Using the double class method gets rid of any restrictions on being unable to use the new
declaration to hide the members. You simply can't use override
if the members are marked as virtual.
public class APIClass
{
private static const string DllName = "external.dll";
[DllImport(DllName)]
public extern unsafe uint external_setSomething(int x, uint y);
[DllImport(DllName)]
public extern unsafe uint external_getSomething(int x, uint* y);
public enum valueEnum
{
On = 0x01000000;
Off = 0x00000000;
OnWithOptions = 0x01010000;
OffWithOptions = 0x00010000;
}
}
public class APIUsageClass : APIClass
{
public int Identifier;
private APIClass m_internalInstance = new APIClass();
public valueEnum Something
{
get
{
unsafe
{
valueEnum y;
fixed (valueEnum* yPtr = &y)
{
m_internalInstance.external_getSomething(Identifier, yPtr);
}
return y;
}
}
set
{
m_internalInstance.external_setSomething(Identifier, value);
}
}
new private uint external_setSomething(int x, float y) { return 0; }
new private unsafe uint external_getSomething(int x, float* y) { return 0; }
}
Now valueEnum is available to both classes, but only the property is visible in the APIUsageClass class. The APIClass class is still available for people who want to extend the original API or use it in a different way, and the APIUsageClass is available for those who want something more simple.
Ultimately, what I'll be doing is making the APIClass internal, and only expose my inherited class.