Louis Rhys
Louis Rhys

Reputation: 35637

C#'s equivalent of Java's <? extends Base> in generics

In Java, I can do the following: (assume Subclass extends Base):

ArrayList<? extends Base> aList = new ArrayList<Subclass>();

What is the equivalent in C# .NET? There is no ? extends keyword apparently and this does not work:

List<Base> aList = new List<Subclass>();

Upvotes: 92

Views: 70724

Answers (4)

Raystorm
Raystorm

Reputation: 6558

Actually there is an Equivalent(sort of), the where keyword. I don't know how "close" it is. I had a function I needed to do something similar for.

I found an msdn page about it.

I don't know if you can do this inline for a variable, but for a class you can do:
public class MyArray<T> where T: someBaseClass
or for a function
public T getArrayList<T>(ArrayList<T> arr) where T: someBaseClass

I didn't see it on the page but using the where keyword it might be possible for a variable.

Upvotes: 145

Guilherme Argentino
Guilherme Argentino

Reputation: 121

If you are looking for two type generics, Take a look at this:

    void putAll<K1, V1>(Dictionary<K1,V1> map) where K1 : K where V1 : V;

Upvotes: 8

decyclone
decyclone

Reputation: 30840

Look into Covariance and Contravariance introduced with .Net 4.0. But it only works with interfaces right now.

Example:

IEnumerable<Base> list = new List<SubClass>();

Upvotes: 8

user541686
user541686

Reputation: 210705

There is no exact equivalent (since the type system doesn't work in quite the same way, with type erasure and all), but you can get very similar functionality with in and out using covariance and contravariance.

Upvotes: 7

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