![]() | |
![]() |
| | Thread Tools | Search this Thread | Display Modes |
#1
| |||
| |||
|
#2
| |||
| |||
|
|
Given that in .NET 1.x, we could make a strongly-typed collection by creating a class that inherited from CollectionBase and implementing custom Add, Remove, and Item members that only work for a given type and that now, with Generics we don't need to do that extra work, does it mean that to fully implement a strongly typed Generic collection in .NET 2.0, I need nothing more than something like this: Public Class foo(Of T) Inherits Generic.List(Of T) End Class |
#3
| |||
| |||
|
|
Scott M. <smar (AT) nospam (DOT) nospam> wrote: Given that in .NET 1.x, we could make a strongly-typed collection by creating a class that inherited from CollectionBase and implementing custom Add, Remove, and Item members that only work for a given type and that now, with Generics we don't need to do that extra work, does it mean that to fully implement a strongly typed Generic collection in .NET 2.0, I need nothing more than something like this: Public Class foo(Of T) Inherits Generic.List(Of T) End Class You don't even need that. Just use List(Of T) directly in your code - unless you're actually adding any functionality to it, why bother creating a new class to derive from it? -- Jon Skeet - <skeet (AT) pobox (DOT) com http://www.pobox.com/~skeet Blog: http://www.msmvps.com/jon.skeet World class .NET training in the UK: http://iterativetraining.co.uk |
#4
| |||
| |||
|
|
Given that in .NET 1.x, we could make a strongly-typed collection by creating a class that inherited from CollectionBase and implementing custom Add, Remove, and Item members that only work for a given type and that now, with Generics we don't need to do that extra work, does it mean that to fully implement a strongly typed Generic collection in .NET 2.0, I need nothing more than something like this: Public Class foo(Of T) Inherits Generic.List(Of T) End Class Since the Generic.List type has Add, Remove, and Item (as well as the Find methods and other useful collection members) and accessing any particular item in the collection will return a strong type association to the underlying object, then what else would I need? |
![]() |
| Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
| Display Modes | |
| |