What is the difference between a generic type and a generic type definition?

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天涯浪人
天涯浪人 2020-12-09 09:32

I\'m Studying up on .net reflection and am having a hard time figuring out the difference.

From what I understand, List is a generic type defi

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  • 2020-12-09 10:16

    In your example List<T> is a generic type definition. T is called a generic type parameter. When the type parameter is specified like in List<string> or List<int> or List<double> then you have a generic type. You can see that by running some code like this...

    public static void Main()
    {
        var l = new List<string>();
        PrintTypeInformation(l.GetType());
        PrintTypeInformation(l.GetType().GetGenericTypeDefinition());
    }
    
    public static void PrintTypeInformation(Type t)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(t);
        Console.WriteLine(t.IsGenericType);
        Console.WriteLine(t.IsGenericTypeDefinition);    
    }
    

    Which will print

    System.Collections.Generic.List`1[System.String] //The Generic Type.
    True //This is a generic type.
    False //But it isn't a generic type definition because the type parameter is specified
    System.Collections.Generic.List`1[T] //The Generic Type definition.
    True //This is a generic type too.                               
    True //And it's also a generic type definition.
    

    Another way to get the generic type definition directly is typeof(List<>) or typeof(Dictionary<,>).

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  • 2020-12-09 10:23

    This will help explain it maybe:

    List<string> lstString = new List<string>();
    List<int> lstInt = new List<int>();
    
    if (lstString.GetType().GetGenericTypeDefinition() ==
        lstInt.GetType().GetGenericTypeDefinition())
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Same type definition.");
    }
    
    if (lstString.GetType() == lstInt.GetType())
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Same type.");
    }
    

    If you run it you will get the first test to pass because both items are implementing the type List<T>. The second test fails because List<string> is not the same as List<int>. The generic type definition is comparing the original generic before T is defined.

    The IsGenericType type is just checking if the generic T has been defined. IsGenericTypeDefinition checks to see that the generic T has NOT been defined. This is useful if you want to know if two objects have been defined from the same base generic type such as the first List<T> example.

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