470

Why was C# designed this way?

As I understand it, an interface only describes behaviour, and serves the purpose of describing a contractual obligation for classes implementing the interface that certain behaviour is implemented.

If classes wish to implement that behavour in a shared method, why shouldn't they?

Here is an example of what I have in mind:

// These items will be displayed in a list on the screen.
public interface IListItem {
  string ScreenName();
  ...
}

public class Animal: IListItem {
    // All animals will be called "Animal".
    public static string ScreenName() {
        return "Animal";
    }
....
}

public class Person: IListItem {

    private string name;

    // All persons will be called by their individual names.
    public string ScreenName() {
        return name;
    }

    ....

 }
5
  • 6
    Well, Java 8 has it (stackoverflow.com/questions/23148471/…).
    – liang
    Jul 11, 2015 at 4:12
  • 1
    See how you can combine a static behavior with inheritance or interface implementation: stackoverflow.com/a/13567309/880990 Jul 30, 2016 at 14:19
  • 1
    IListItem.ScreenName() => ScreenName() (using C# 7 syntax) will implement the interface method explicitly by calling the static method. Things get ugly when you add inheritance to that, though (you have to reimplement the interface) Apr 18, 2017 at 14:34
  • 3
    Just letting everyone know that the wait is now over! C# 8.0 has static interface methods: dotnetfiddle.net/Lrzy6y (although they work a little different to how OP wanted them to work - you don't have to implement them) Nov 21, 2019 at 20:08
  • 1
    For an answer starting 2022 see: link; C# 11 supports static abstract on interfaces.
    – minus one
    Oct 25, 2022 at 17:33

28 Answers 28

231

Assuming you are asking why you can't do this:

public interface IFoo {
    void Bar();
}

public class Foo: IFoo {
    public static void Bar() {}
}

This doesn't make sense to me, semantically. Methods specified on an interface should be there to specify the contract for interacting with an object. Static methods do not allow you to interact with an object - if you find yourself in the position where your implementation could be made static, you may need to ask yourself if that method really belongs in the interface.


To implement your example, I would give Animal a const property, which would still allow it to be accessed from a static context, and return that value in the implementation.

public class Animal: IListItem {
    /* Can be tough to come up with a different, yet meaningful name!
     * A different casing convention, like Java has, would help here.
     */
    public const string AnimalScreenName = "Animal";
    public string ScreenName(){ return AnimalScreenName; }
}

For a more complicated situation, you could always declare another static method and delegate to that. In trying come up with an example, I couldn't think of any reason you would do something non-trivial in both a static and instance context, so I'll spare you a FooBar blob, and take it as an indication that it might not be a good idea.

13
  • 7
    A perfect example! But I'm not sure I understand your reasoning. Surely the compiler could have been designed to look at the statuc members as well? Don't the instances have a table of addresses for the implementation of theis methods? Couldn't the static methods be included in this table?
    – Kramii
    Nov 3, 2008 at 16:03
  • 12
    There is a case where this could be useful. For instance, I want all the implementors to implement a GetInstance method that takes an XElement argument. I can neither define that as a static method in the interface, nor demand a constructor signature from the interface.
    – oleks
    Feb 16, 2011 at 13:23
  • 25
    A lot of folks have weighed in on both sides: from "This makes no sense" to "It's a bug, I wish you could." (I think there are valid use cases for it, which is how I ended up here.) As a workaround, the instance method can simply delegate to a static method.
    – harpo
    Mar 31, 2011 at 18:27
  • 5
    You could also simply implement the piece as an extension method onto the base interface, as in: public static object MethodName(this IBaseClass base) within a static class. The downside, however, is that unlike an interface inheritance - this does not force / allow the individual inheritors to override the methodology well. Nov 3, 2012 at 0:26
  • 8
    It would make a lot of sense with generics. For example void Something<T>() where T : ISomeInterface { new T().DoSomething1(); T.DoSomething2(); } Dec 18, 2013 at 10:06
182

My (simplified) technical reason is that static methods are not in the vtable, and the call site is chosen at compile time. It's the same reason you can't have override or virtual static members. For more details, you'd need a CS grad or compiler wonk - of which I'm neither.

For the political reason, I'll quote Eric Lippert (who is a compiler wonk, and holds a Bachelor of Mathematics, Computer science and Applied Mathematics from University of Waterloo (source: LinkedIn):

...the core design principle of static methods, the principle that gives them their name...[is]...it can always be determined exactly, at compile time, what method will be called. That is, the method can be resolved solely by static analysis of the code.

Note that Lippert does leave room for a so-called type method:

That is, a method associated with a type (like a static), which does not take a non-nullable “this” argument (unlike an instance or virtual), but one where the method called would depend on the constructed type of T (unlike a static, which must be determinable at compile time).

but is yet to be convinced of its usefulness.

17
  • 5
    Excellent, this is the answer that I wanted to write - I just didn't know the implementation detail. Nov 3, 2008 at 17:44
  • 6
    Great answer. And I want this 'type method'! Would be useful in so many occasions (think about metadata for a type/class). Apr 18, 2012 at 14:22
  • 26
    This is the correct answer. You pass an interface to someone, they need to know how to call a method. An interface is just a virtual method table. Your static class doesn't have that. The caller wouldn't know how to call a method. (Before i read this answer i thought C# was just being pedantic. Now i realize it's a technical limitation, imposed by what an interface is). Other people will talk down to you about how it's a bad design. It's not a bad design - it's a technical limitation.
    – Ian Boyd
    Jun 11, 2012 at 17:18
  • 3
    It's totally possible to generate an object for a static class with associated vtable. Look at how Scala handles objects and how they are permitted to implement interfaces. May 8, 2014 at 19:45
  • 3
    A vtable could just point to the static implementation, much like Func<> does, but instead of just containing one pointer, it contains all pointers for methods required by the interface. Using static like in static dispatch does artificially hamstring the language for the sake of 'object-orientation'. May 9, 2014 at 21:13
104

Most answers here seem to miss the whole point. Polymorphism can be used not only between instances, but also between types. This is often needed, when we use generics.

Suppose we have type parameter in generic method and we need to do some operation with it. We dont want to instantinate, because we are unaware of the constructors.

For example:

Repository GetRepository<T>()
{
  //need to call T.IsQueryable, but can't!!!
  //need to call T.RowCount
  //need to call T.DoSomeStaticMath(int param)
}

...
var r = GetRepository<Customer>()

Unfortunately, I can come up only with "ugly" alternatives:

  • Use reflection Ugly and beats the idea of interfaces and polymorphism.

  • Create completely separate factory class

    This might greatly increase the complexity of the code. For example, if we are trying to model domain objects, each object would need another repository class.

  • Instantiate and then call the desired interface method

    This can be hard to implement even if we control the source for the classes, used as generic parameters. The reason is that, for example we might need the instances to be only in well-known, "connected to DB" state.

Example:

public class Customer 
{
  //create new customer
  public Customer(Transaction t) { ... }

  //open existing customer
  public Customer(Transaction t, int id) { ... }

  void SomeOtherMethod() 
  { 
    //do work...
  }
}

in order to use instantination for solving the static interface problem we need to do the following thing:

public class Customer: IDoSomeStaticMath
{
  //create new customer
  public Customer(Transaction t) { ... }

  //open existing customer
  public Customer(Transaction t, int id) { ... }

  //dummy instance
  public Customer() { IsDummy = true; }

  int DoSomeStaticMath(int a) { }

  void SomeOtherMethod() 
  { 
    if(!IsDummy) 
    {
      //do work...
    }
  }
}

This is obviously ugly and also unnecessary complicates the code for all other methods. Obviously, not an elegant solution either!

14
  • 39
    +1 for "Most answers here seem to miss the whole point."; it's incredible how it seems that pretty much all the answers dodge the core of the question to delve into mostly unuseful verbiage...
    – user610650
    May 31, 2012 at 16:06
  • 5
    @Chris Here's a specific example that made me just hit this restriction again. I want to add an IResettable interface to classes to indicate that they cache certain data in static variables that can be reset by the site admin (e.g. an order category list, a set of vat rates, a list of categories retrieved from an external API) to reduce the DB and external API hits, this would obviously use a static method reset. This allows me to just automate the detection of which classes can be reset. I can still do this, but the method is not enforced or automatically added in the IDE and relies on hope.
    – mattmanser
    Oct 26, 2012 at 14:18
  • 8
    @Chris I disagree, massive overkill. It's always a sign of a language flaw when more architecture is the 'best' solution. Remember all the patterns no-one talks about any more since C# got generics and anonymous methods?
    – mattmanser
    Oct 30, 2012 at 9:15
  • 3
    Can't you use "where T : IQueryable, T : IDoSomeStaticMath" or similar ? Dec 7, 2012 at 2:44
  • 2
    @ChrisMarasti-Georg: A somewhat dirty but interesting way around it is this little construction: public abstract class DBObject<T> where T : DBObject<T>, new(), and then make all DB classes inherit as DBObject<T>. Then you can make the retrieve-by-key a static function with return type T in the abstract superclass, make that function create a new object of T, and then call a protected String GetRetrieveByKeyQuery() (defined as abstract on the superclass) on that object to get the actual query to execute. Though this might be getting a tad off topic
    – Nyerguds
    May 12, 2015 at 13:26
20

I know it's an old question, but it's interesting. The example isn't the best. I think it would be much clearer if you showed a usage case:

string DoSomething<T>() where T:ISomeFunction
{
  if (T.someFunction())
    ...
}

Merely being able to have static methods implement an interface would not achieve what you want; what would be needed would be to have static members as part of an interface. I can certainly imagine many usage cases for that, especially when it comes to being able to create things. Two approaches I could offer which might be helpful:

  1. Create a static generic class whose type parameter will be the type you'd be passing to DoSomething above. Each variation of this class will have one or more static members holding stuff related to that type. This information could supplied either by having each class of interest call a "register information" routine, or by using Reflection to get the information when the class variation's static constructor is run. I believe the latter approach is used by things like Comparer<T>.Default().
  2. For each class T of interest, define a class or struct which implements IGetWhateverClassInfo<T> and satisfies a "new" constraint. The class won't actually contain any fields, but will have a static property which returns a static field with the type information. Pass the type of that class or struct to the generic routine in question, which will be able to create an instance and use it to get information about the other class. If you use a class for this purpose, you should probably define a static generic class as indicated above, to avoid having to construct a new descriptor-object instance each time. If you use a struct, instantiation cost should be nil, but every different struct type would require a different expansion of the DoSomething routine.

None of these approaches is really appealing. On the other hand, I would expect that if the mechanisms existed in CLR to provide this sort of functionality cleanly, .net would allow one to specify parameterized "new" constraints (since knowing if a class has a constructor with a particular signature would seem to be comparable in difficulty to knowing if it has a static method with a particular signature).

0
16

Short-sightedness, I'd guess.

When originally designed, interfaces were intended only to be used with instances of class

IMyInterface val = GetObjectImplementingIMyInterface();
val.SomeThingDefinedinInterface();

It was only with the introduction of interfaces as constraints for generics did adding a static method to an interface have a practical use.

(responding to comment:) I believe changing it now would require a change to the CLR, which would lead to incompatibilities with existing assemblies.

3
  • It is in the context of generics that I first encountered the problem, but I wonder if including static methods in interfaces could be useful in other contexts, too? Is there a reason why things couldn't be changed?
    – Kramii
    Nov 3, 2008 at 16:05
  • me too encounter this when implementing a generic class which require the parameter type to create itself with some parameters. Since the new() cannot take any. Did you figure out how to do this yet, Kramii?
    – Tom
    Dec 9, 2009 at 18:31
  • 1
    @Kramii: Contracts for static APIs. I don't want an object instance, just a guarantee of a particular signature, eg. IMatrixMultiplier or ICustomSerializer. Funcs/Actions/Delegates as class members do the trick, but IMO this sometimes seems like overkill, and can be confusing for the unexperienced trying to extend the API.
    – lightw8
    May 9, 2010 at 22:04
15

To the extent that interfaces represent "contracts", it seems quiet reasonable for static classes to implement interfaces.

The above arguments all seem to miss this point about contracts.

3
  • 3
    I totally agree with this simple but effective answer. What would be interesting in "static interface" is that it would represent a contract. Maybe it should not be called a "static interface" but we still miss a construct. For example, check .NET's official doc about the ICustomMarshaler interface. It requires the class that implements it to "add a static method called GetInstance that accepts a String as a parameter and has a return type of ICustomMarshaler". That does seriously look like a "static interface" definition in plain english while I would prefer it in C#... Oct 27, 2015 at 9:48
  • @SimonMourier That documentation could have been written more clearly, but you are misinterpreting it. It's not the ICustomMarshaler interface that requires the GetInstance static method. It is the [MarshalAs] code attribute that requires this. They are using the factory pattern to allow the attribute to get an instance of the attached marshaler. Unfortunately they completely forgot to include documenting the GetInstance requirement on the MarshalAs documentation page (it only shows examples using built-in marshaling implementations). Jun 20, 2017 at 19:53
  • @ScottGartner - Don't get your point. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… clearly states : "In addition to implementing the ICustomMarshaler interface, custom marshalers must implement a static method called GetInstance that accepts a String as a parameter and has a return type of ICustomMarshaler. This static method is called by the common language runtime's COM interop layer to instantiate an instance of the custom marshaler.". This is a definitely a static contract definition. Jun 20, 2017 at 20:53
14

Interfaces specify behavior of an object.

Static methods do not specify a behavior of an object, but behavior that affects an object in some way.

9
  • 73
    Sorry.. I'm not sure that's right! An interface doesn't specify behavior. An interface defines a set of named operations. Two classes could implement an interface's method to behave in completely different ways. So, an interface doesn't specify behavior at all. The class that implements it does. Nov 3, 2008 at 17:27
  • 1
    Hope you don't think I'm being picky.. but I think it's an important distinction for anybody learning OO to understand. Nov 3, 2008 at 17:28
  • 4
    An interface is supposed to specify a contract that includes behavior and presentation. That's why changing the behavior of an interface call is a no-no as both are supposed to be fixed. If you have an interface where the call acts differently (i.e. IList.Add did a remove) it wouldn't be right.
    – Jeff Yates
    Nov 3, 2008 at 18:03
  • 15
    Well, yes, you'd be warped in the head to define a method to behave incongruously to its name. If you had IAlertService.GetAssistance() though, it's behaviour could be to flash a light, sound an alarm, or poke in the eye with a stick. Nov 4, 2008 at 0:05
  • 1
    An implementation would also be able to write to a log file. This behaviour isn't specified in the interface. But, maybe you're right. The behaviour to 'get assistance' should really be respected. Nov 4, 2008 at 0:09
10

Because the purpose of an interface is to allow polymorphism, being able to pass an instance of any number of defined classes that have all been defined to implement the defined interface... guaranteeing that within your polymorphic call, the code will be able to find the method you are calling. it makes no sense to allow a static method to implement the interface,

How would you call it??


public interface MyInterface { void MyMethod(); }
public class MyClass: MyInterface
{
    public static void MyMethod() { //Do Something; }
}

 // inside of some other class ...  
 // How would you call the method on the interface ???
    MyClass.MyMethod();  // this calls the method normally 
                         // not through the interface...

    // This next fails you can't cast a classname to a different type... 
    // Only instances can be Cast to a different type...
    MyInterface myItf = MyClass as MyInterface;  
4
  • 1
    Other languages (Java, for example) allow static methods to be called from object instances, although you will get a warning that you should be calling them from a static context. Nov 3, 2008 at 18:48
  • Allowing a static method to be called from an instance is allowed in .Net as well. That is a different thing. If a static method implemented an interface, you could call it WITHOUT an instance. THAT is what does not make sense. Remember you can't put implementation in an interface, it must be in the class. So if five different classes were defined to implement that interface, and each had a different implementation of this static method, which would the compiler use? Dec 30, 2014 at 14:48
  • 1
    @CharlesBretana in the case of generics, the one for the type passed in. I see a lot of usefulness in having interfaces for static methods (or if you want, let's call them "static interfaces" and allow a class to define both static interfaces and instance interfaces). So if I have Whatever<T>() where T:IMyStaticInterface I could call Whatever<MyClass>() and have T.MyStaticMethod() inside the Whatever<T>() implementation without needing an instance. The method to call would be determined in runtime. You can do this via reflection, but there's no "contract" to be forced.
    – Jcl
    Mar 3, 2015 at 14:42
  • The term "polymorphism" has a much more generic meaning than just dispatching virtcalls through a vtable. Even function overloading is a type of polymorphism, and for example template metaprogramming in C++ allows using this in ways that aren't possible in C# (and it does so even while still being statically dispatched). Combining all the int.TryParse, short.TryParse etc. methods to a generic IParse.TryParse could allow calling T.TryParse on a generic type T where T : IParse. Not possible in C# without hackery, but something equivalent is possible in C++ (and some other languages).
    – dialer
    Sep 10, 2021 at 20:57
5

Actually, it does.

As of Mid-2022, the current version of C# has full support for so-called static abstract members:

interface INumber<T>
{
    static abstract T Zero { get; }
}

struct Fraction : INumber<Fraction>
{
    public static Fraction Zero { get; } = new Fraction();

    public long Numerator;
    public ulong Denominator;

    ....
}

Please note that depending on your version of Visual Studio and your installed .NET SDK, you'll either have to update at least one of them (or maybe both), or that you'll have to enable preview features (see Use preview features & preview language in Visual Studio).

See more:

4

Regarding static methods used in non-generic contexts I agree that it doesn't make much sense to allow them in interfaces, since you wouldn't be able to call them if you had a reference to the interface anyway. However there is a fundamental hole in the language design created by using interfaces NOT in a polymorphic context, but in a generic one. In this case the interface is not an interface at all but rather a constraint. Because C# has no concept of a constraint outside of an interface it is missing substantial functionality. Case in point:

T SumElements<T>(T initVal, T[] values)
{
    foreach (var v in values)
    {
        initVal += v;
    }
}

Here there is no polymorphism, the generic uses the actual type of the object and calls the += operator, but this fails since it can't say for sure that that operator exists. The simple solution is to specify it in the constraint; the simple solution is impossible because operators are static and static methods can't be in an interface and (here is the problem) constraints are represented as interfaces.

What C# needs is a real constraint type, all interfaces would also be constraints, but not all constraints would be interfaces then you could do this:

constraint CHasPlusEquals
{
    static CHasPlusEquals operator + (CHasPlusEquals a, CHasPlusEquals b);
}

T SumElements<T>(T initVal, T[] values) where T : CHasPlusEquals
{
    foreach (var v in values)
    {
        initVal += v;
    }
}

There has been lots of talk already about making an IArithmetic for all numeric types to implement, but there is concern about efficiency, since a constraint is not a polymorphic construct, making a CArithmetic constraint would solve that problem.

7
  • Operators in C# are static, so this still doesn't make sense. Aug 13, 2013 at 18:39
  • Thats the point, the constraint verifies that the TYPE (not instance) has the + operator (and by extension the += operator) and allows the template to be generated, then when the actual template substitution occures the object being used is guaranteed to be of a type that has that operator (or other static method.) So you can say: SumElements<int>(0, 5); which would instantiate this: SumElements(int initVal, int[] values) { foreach (var v in values) { initVal += v; } }, which of course, makes perfect sense Aug 13, 2013 at 21:44
  • 1
    Remember it's not a template. It's generics, which is not the same as C++ templates. Aug 13, 2013 at 21:46
  • @JohnSaunders: Generics aren't templates, and I don't know how they could reasonably be made to work with statically-bound operators, but in generic contexts there are many cases where it could be useful to specify that a T should have a static member (e.g. a factory that produces T instances). Even without runtime changes, I think it would be possible to define conventions and helper methods that would allow languages to implement such a thing as syntactic sugar in an efficient and interoperable fashion. If for each interface with virtual static methods there were a helper class...
    – supercat
    Dec 14, 2013 at 18:51
  • 1
    @JohnSaunders: The problem isn't that so much the method implements an interface, but rather that the compiler can't select a virtual method to call without having an object instance upon which to base the selection. A solution is to dispatch the "static interface" call not using virtual dispatch (which won't work) but instead using a call to a generic static class. Type-based generic dispatch doesn't require having an instance, but merely having a type.
    – supercat
    Dec 14, 2013 at 20:53
3

Because interfaces are in inheritance structure, and static methods don't inherit well.

0
3

What you seem to want would allow for a static method to be called via both the Type or any instance of that type. This would at very least result in ambiguity which is not a desirable trait.

There would be endless debates about whether it mattered, which is best practice and whether there are performance issues doing it one way or another. By simply not supporting it C# saves us having to worry about it.

Its also likely that a compilier that conformed to this desire would lose some optimisations that may come with a more strict separation between instance and static methods.

1
  • Interestingly, it is quite possible to call a static method by both Type ad Instance in VB.Net (even though the IDE gives a warning in the latter case). It doesn't appear to be a problem. You may be right about the optimisations.
    – Kramii
    Nov 3, 2008 at 16:54
3

You can think of the static methods and non-static methods of a class as being different interfaces. When called, static methods resolve to the singleton static class object, and non-static methods resolve to the instance of the class you deal with. So, if you use static and non-static methods in an interface, you'd effectively be declaring two interfaces when really we want interfaces to be used to access one cohesive thing.

1
  • This is an interesting POV, and is probably the one that the C# designers had in mind. I will think of static members in a different way from now on.
    – Kramii
    Nov 3, 2008 at 17:00
3

To give an example where I am missing either static implementation of interface methods or what Mark Brackett introduced as the "so-called type method":

When reading from a database storage, we have a generic DataTable class that handles reading from a table of any structure. All table specific information is put in one class per table that also holds data for one row from the DB and which must implement an IDataRow interface. Included in the IDataRow is a description of the structure of the table to read from the database. The DataTable must ask for the datastructure from the IDataRow before reading from the DB. Currently this looks like:

interface IDataRow {
  string GetDataSTructre();  // How to read data from the DB
  void Read(IDBDataRow);     // How to populate this datarow from DB data
}

public class DataTable<T> : List<T> where T : IDataRow {

  public string GetDataStructure()
    // Desired: Static or Type method:
    // return (T.GetDataStructure());
    // Required: Instantiate a new class:
    return (new T().GetDataStructure());
  }

}

The GetDataStructure is only required once for each table to read, the overhead for instantiating one more instance is minimal. However, it would be nice in this case here.

1

FYI: You could get a similar behavior to what you want by creating extension methods for the interface. The extension method would be a shared, non overridable static behavior. However, unfortunately, this static method would not be part of the contract.

1

Interfaces are abstract sets of defined available functionality.

Whether or not a method in that interface behaves as static or not is an implementation detail that should be hidden behind the interface. It would be wrong to define an interface method as static because you would be unnecessarily forcing the method to be implemented in a certain way.

If methods were defined as static, the class implementing the interface wouldn't be as encapsulated as it could be. Encapsulation is a good thing to strive for in object oriented design (I won't go into why, you can read that here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Object-oriented). For this reason, static methods aren't permitted in interfaces.

4
  • 1
    Yes, a static in the interface declaration would be silly. A class should not be forced to implement the interface in a certain way. However, does C# restrict a class to implementing the interface using non-static methods. Does this make sense? Why?
    – Kramii
    Nov 3, 2008 at 16:50
  • You can't use the keyword 'static'. There is no restriction though because you don't need the static keyword to write a method that behaves statically. Just write a method that doesn't access any of its object's members, then it will behave just like a static method. So, there is restriction. Nov 3, 2008 at 17:06
  • True Scott, but it doesn't allow someone to access that method in a static way, in another part of the code. Not that I can think of a reason you would want to, but that seems to be what the OP is asking. Nov 3, 2008 at 17:41
  • Well, if you really felt the need you could write it as a static method for access in another part of the code, and just write the non-static method to call the static method. I could be wrong, but I doubt that's an objective of the questioner. Nov 3, 2008 at 23:46
1

Static classes should be able to do this so they can be used generically. I had to instead implement a Singleton to achieve the desired results.

I had a bunch of Static Business Layer classes that implemented CRUD methods like "Create", "Read", "Update", "Delete" for each entity type like "User", "Team", ect.. Then I created a base control that had an abstract property for the Business Layer class that implemented the CRUD methods. This allowed me to automate the "Create", "Read", "Update", "Delete" operations from the base class. I had to use a Singleton because of the Static limitation.

1

Most people seem to forget that in OOP Classes are objects too, and so they have messages, which for some reason c# calls "static method". The fact that differences exist between instance objects and class objects only shows flaws or shortcomings in the language. Optimist about c# though...

1
  • 2
    The problem is that this question isn't about "in OOP". It's about "in C#". In C#, there are no "messages". Dec 14, 2013 at 19:09
1

OK here is an example of needing a 'type method'. I am creating one of a set of classes based on some source XML. So I have a

  static public bool IsHandled(XElement xml)

function which is called in turn on each class.

The function should be static as otherwise we waste time creating inappropriate objects. As @Ian Boyde points out it could be done in a factory class, but this just adds complexity.

It would be nice to add it to the interface to force class implementors to implement it. This would not cause significant overhead - it is only a compile/link time check and does not affect the vtable.

However, it would also be a fairly minor improvement. As the method is static, I as the caller, must call it explicitly and so get an immediate compile error if it is not implemented. Allowing it to be specified on the interface would mean this error comes marginally earlier in the development cycle, but this is trivial compared to other broken-interface issues.

So it is a minor potential feature which on balance is probably best left out.

1

The fact that a static class is implemented in C# by Microsoft creating a special instance of a class with the static elements is just an oddity of how static functionality is achieved. It is isn't a theoretical point.

An interface SHOULD be a descriptor of the class interface - or how it is interacted with, and that should include interactions that are static. The general definition of interface (from Meriam-Webster): the place or area at which different things meet and communicate with or affect each other. When you omit static components of a class or static classes entirely, we are ignoring large sections of how these bad boys interact.

Here is a very clear example of where being able to use interfaces with static classes would be quite useful:

public interface ICrudModel<T, Tk>
{
    Boolean Create(T obj);
    T Retrieve(Tk key);
    Boolean Update(T obj);
    Boolean Delete(T obj);
}

Currently, I write the static classes that contain these methods without any kind of checking to make sure that I haven't forgotten anything. Is like the bad old days of programming before OOP.

1
  • This is an ancient question; these days, we try very hard to avoid opinion-based questions because they're difficult to answer authoritatively. The only good way to answer this would be to describe the reasons MS had, or demonstrably should have had, for doing it the way they did. Jul 26, 2015 at 0:47
1

C# and the CLR should support static methods in interfaces as Java does. The static modifier is part of a contract definition and does have meaning, specifically that the behavior and return value do not vary base on instance although it may still vary from call to call.

That said, I recommend that when you want to use a static method in an interface and cannot, use an annotation instead. You will get the functionality you are looking for.

1

Static Methods within an Interface are allowed as of c# 9 (see https://www.dotnetcurry.com/csharp/simpler-code-with-csharp-9).

0

I think the short answer is "because it is of zero usefulness". To call an interface method, you need an instance of the type. From instance methods you can call any static methods you want to.

0

I think the question is getting at the fact that C# needs another keyword, for precisely this sort of situation. You want a method whose return value depends only on the type on which it is called. You can't call it "static" if said type is unknown. But once the type becomes known, it will become static. "Unresolved static" is the idea -- it's not static yet, but once we know the receiving type, it will be. This is a perfectly good concept, which is why programmers keep asking for it. But it didn't quite fit into the way the designers thought about the language.

Since it's not available, I have taken to using non-static methods in the way shown below. Not exactly ideal, but I can't see any approach that makes more sense, at least not for me.

public interface IZeroWrapper<TNumber> {
  TNumber Zero {get;}
}

public class DoubleWrapper: IZeroWrapper<double> {
  public double Zero { get { return 0; } }
}
0

As per Object oriented concept Interface implemented by classes and have contract to access these implemented function(or methods) using object.

So if you want to access Interface Contract methods you have to create object. It is always must that is not allowed in case of Static methods. Static classes ,method and variables never require objects and load in memory without creating object of that area(or class) or you can say do not require Object Creation.

0

Conceptually there is no reason why an interface could not define a contract that includes static methods.

For the current C# language implementation, the restriction is due to the allowance of inheritance of a base class and interfaces. If "class SomeBaseClass" implements "interface ISomeInterface" and "class SomeDerivedClass : SomeBaseClass, ISomeInterface" also implements the interface, a static method to implement an interface method would fail compile because a static method cannot have same signature as an instance method (which would be present in base class to implement the interface).

A static class is functionally identical to a singleton and serves the same purpose as a singleton with cleaner syntax. Since a singleton can implement an interface, interface implementations by statics are conceptually valid.

So it simply boils down to the limitation of C# name conflict for instance and static methods of the same name across inheritance. There is no reason why C# could not be "upgraded" to support static method contracts (interfaces).

0

An interface is an OOPS concept, which means every member of the interface should get used through an object or instance. Hence, an interface can not have static methods.

1
-1

When a class implements an interface,it is creating instance for the interface members. While a static type doesnt have an instance,there is no point in having static signatures in an interface.

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