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Until I tried to do this, I assumed that I knew how this worked; however, the following code throws an exception. Because TestOC is a child of ObservableCollection, I thought I could do this:

class MyClass
{
    public string MyProperty { get; set; }
}

class TestOC : ObservableCollection<MyClass>
{

}

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        ObservableCollection<MyClass> test = new ObservableCollection<MyClass>();
        test.Add(new MyClass());

        TestOC test2 = (TestOC)test;
    }
}

The error thrown is:

Unable to cast object of type 'System.Collections.ObjectModel.ObservableCollection`1[ConsoleApplication17.MyClass]' to type 'ConsoleApplication17.TestOC'.

How can I get the ObservableCollection to assign to my child class here?

3
  • Why do you want to cast a parent class to its subclass? Sep 21, 2016 at 18:01
  • Pretty much a duplicate of: stackoverflow.com/questions/16534253/…
    – steve v
    Sep 21, 2016 at 18:04
  • 2
    You can't cast an arbitrary Animal to a Dog. You can create a new Dog with the same properties as the Animal but you can't cast.
    – D Stanley
    Sep 21, 2016 at 18:04

1 Answer 1

2

You cannot cast an ObservableCollection<MyClass> to TestOC.

Because it is derived. Meaning TestOC extends ObservableCollection<MyClass>. So if you want to cast an ObservableCollection<MyClass> to TestOC, it is missing the functionality that TestOC adds. (even when the subclass doesn't have anything extra)

But you could cast a TestOC to an ObservableCollection<MyClass>. Because TestOC does implement all what an ObservableCollection<MyClass> implements.


This doesn't work:

TestOC test2 = new ObservableCollection<MyClass>();

This does work:

ObservableCollection<MyClass> test2 = new TestOC();

How can I get the ObservableCollection to assign to my child class here?

You cannot, but there are some options:

1 - Instead of creating a ObservableCollection<MyClass>, you should construct a TestOC. (new TestOC())

2 - If you don't want to write ObservableCollection<MyClass> but a shorter version, you could use aliases, but this doesn't add any functionality. It's only syntactic sugar. This way you could new a TestOC but behind it is a ObservableCollection<MyClass> so fully assignable.

using TestOC = System.Collections.ObjectModel.ObservableCollection<MyClass>;

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