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C# internal interface with internal implementation

I've struck upon something I don't really understand.

I have a project, where I have an interface that is internal. The class that implements that interface is also internal. In the implementation of the interface, I make all the members that I implement, internal. I did not do an explicit implementation.

I have two interfaces and two classes that implement those interfaces where this works fine.

It would look something like this:

internal interface IA
{
    void X();
}

and then

internal class CA : IA
{
    internal void X()
    {
        ...
    }
}

This works fine for the two aforementioned classes. But when I try to do it with another interface and class, it doesn't work. In fact, for the example above, I get the error:

'WindowsFormsApplication1.CA' does not implement interface member 'WindowsFormsApplication1.IA.X()'. 'WindowsFormsApplication1.CA.X()' cannot implement an interface member because it is not public.

I realize I can make the methods public or do an explicit implementation (and omit the internal and public modifiers), but I'm simply confused as to why it works with the two classes it works with and yet I seem to be unable to replicate it anywhere else.

Butchering the code a bit (because it's confidential), this is one of the ones that actually works in my project.

internal interface IScanner
{
    void SetHardware(Hardware hardware);
    void Start();
    void PauseScan();
    void ResumeScan();
    void Stop();
    bool InScan { get; }
    event ScanCompleteHandler ScanComplete;
}

Then I have the class:

internal class MyScanner : IScanner
{
    internal void SetHardware(Hardware hardware)
    {
       ...
    }

    internal void Start()
    {
        ...
    }

    internal void Stop()
    {
        ...
    }

    internal void PauseScan()
    {
        ...
    }

    internal void ResumeScan()
    {
        ...
    }

    internal bool InScan
    {
        get
        {
            ...
        }
    }

    internal event ScanCompleteHandler ScanComplete;
}

To make things even stranger, I created another internal class called Temp. I then had it implement the IScanner interface and I copied and pasted the implementation from MyScanner over to it and it won't compile, giving me the error that: "cannot implement an interface member because it is not public."

Can anyone explain this inconsistency?

Thanks

(Updated to fix a typo and clarify some text)

EDIT: Additional Information

I ran the code through reflector and my implementations have been compiled as explicit implementations, even though they aren't explicit. Reflector shows no signs of the internal keywords. All I can guess is that this is some sort of glitch in the compiler that, for some reason, allowed me to make them internal and implicit and that it somehow resolved that as being an explicit implementation.

I've looked over the code a number of times. I can't find any other explanation for it.

like image 292
Pete Avatar asked May 24 '11 21:05

Pete


4 Answers

If you are implicitly implementing an interface I believe that the member must be declared public. In your example, CA attempts to implicitly implement the X() method but isn't declared public. If you want to keep X() as internal then you should use explicit interface implementation.

void IA.X() { /* stuff */ }

However, I'll also add that making the X() method public wouldn't do any harm anyway as the class is internal so that member is already restricted by that access modifier... That is, it's already effectively internal... So you might as well just make it public!

like image 66
Reddog Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 08:10

Reddog


I know it has been a while since this question was asked, but maybe I can shed some light on it. According to the C# language specification found here the behavior you described should not be possible. Because under 20.4.2 Interface mapping it is said that the implementation is either explicit or mapped to a public non-static member. So either you have some other scenario than the one you are describing here, or you found a bug in your compiler :).

like image 17
S. Larws Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 09:10

S. Larws


Probably that your "Temp" class is public and IScanner is internal. This is the reason why you get this error. I consider this very annoying since your are forced to implement it explicitly you cannot specify them as abstract or virtual. For the virtual stuff, I was forced to do an implicit internal virtual implementation of the same API and then call the implicit version from the explicit one. Ugly.

like image 3
NoNameStackExchange Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 07:10

NoNameStackExchange


If your intention is to hide a certain implementation from outside, you can implement it explicitly like this:

internal class LDialogService : ILDialogService, ILDialogInternalService
{

    public async Task<TValue> ShowAsync<TValue>(ILDialogFragment fragment)
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }

    void ILDialogInternalService.SetComponent(LDialog component)
    {
        throw new NotImplementedException();
    }
}

In the above code, I want to expose ShowAsync method to the outside but keep SetComponent inside. Since ILDialogInternalService is internal, no one can call it from outside except through Reflection.

like image 3
Luke Vo Avatar answered Oct 22 '22 09:10

Luke Vo