Why does List implement IList, ICollection and IEnumerable?

前端 未结 4 873
Happy的楠姐
Happy的楠姐 2020-12-05 17:32

If you go to definition of List you would see the following:

public class List : IList, ICollection, IEnumer         


        
4条回答
  •  佛祖请我去吃肉
    2020-12-05 18:38

    Yes, it makes no difference in this case. In some cases it can make a difference, if you're using a base class which already implements an interface but you wish to reimplement it yourself explicitly - but in this case there's no base class (other than the implicit object) and it would have behaved exactly the same way.

    Contrary to my recollections, I don't believe there's a difference in the way the class is represented in metadata whether the code explicitly declares all the interfaces or not. Here's an example:

    interface IFoo {}
    interface IBar : IFoo {}
    
    class FooBar1 : IBar {}
    class FooBar2 : IBar, IFoo {}
    

    Both ildasm and Reflector show the same information for FooBar1 and FooBar2... it shows both of them implementing IBar and IFoo.

    In other words, we can't tell whether the original source code for List actually specifies all the interfaces or not. Maybe it does, maybe it doesn't - but it doesn't matter either way.

    EDIT: For completeness, I also checked the cases where you're extending two interfaces with another interface. I can't find a difference in the metadata in that case, either. I'm sure I remember some situation in which it was evident, but I can't find it now.

提交回复
热议问题