20

In Java it is possible to extend an interface with an anonymous class that you can implement on the fly. Example:

Runnable myRunnable = new Runnable()
{
    @Override
    public void run() { /**/ }
}

(More on: http://www.techartifact.com/blogs/2009/08/anonymous-classes-in-java.html#ixzz1k07mVIeO)

Is this possible in C#? If not, what are viable alternatives without having to rely on implementing a plethora of subclasses?

0

2 Answers 2

20

No, you can't do that in C# - but typically the alternative design approach is to use a delegate instead. In the example you've given, Runnable is usually represented using ThreadStart, and you can use an anonymous method or lambda expression:

ThreadStart start = () =>
{
    // Do stuff here
};

Or if you just have a method to run, with the right signature, you can use a method group conversion:

ThreadStart start = MethodToRunInThread;

Or in the Thread constructor call:

Thread t = new Thread(MethodToRunInThread);
t.Start();

If you really need to implement an interface, you'll have to really implement it (possibly in a private nested class). However, that doesn't come up terribly often in C#, in my experience - normally C# interfaces are the kind which would naturally demand a "real" implementation anyway, even in Java.

1
  • 1
    This is a feature I miss from time to time, especially because my interfaces are often narrow (role interfaces) and adhere to the Interface Segregation Principle. It would be convenient when I could register a delegate in my DI configuration, while the rest of the application could still depend on that interface (instead of a Func<T>), without having to create some sort of proxy class that wraps that delegate and implement that interface.
    – Steven
    Jan 20, 2012 at 13:00
8

As Jon pointed out this is not possible in C#.

One alternate pattern in C# though is to use a combination of a factory and a delegate to allow on the fly implementations of an interface. Essentially the factory takes in a delegate for each method of the interface and uses them as the backing implementation. For example, here's a version for IComparable<T>.

public static class ComparableFactory {
  private sealed ComparableImpl<T> : IComparable<T> {
    internal Func<T, T, int> _compareFunc;
    public int Compare(T left, T right) {
      return _compareFunc(left, right);
    }
  }
  public IComparable<T> Create<T>(Func<T, T, int> compareFunc) {
    return new ComparableImpl<T>() { _compareFunc = compareFunc };
  }
}

...

IComparable<Person> impl = CompareableFactory.Create<Person>(
  (left, right) => left.Age.CompareTo(right.Age));
1
  • Very cool, +1! But as a good practice, better to just roll the named class..
    – nawfal
    Apr 19, 2013 at 18:24

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