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Home/ Questions/Q 726961
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T06:30:44+00:00 2026-05-14T06:30:44+00:00

According to this article about writing shell extensions in .Net, inheriting the shell interfaces

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According to this article about writing shell extensions in .Net, inheriting the shell interfaces as you might naturally do when writing code doesn’t work. I’ve observed this in my own code as well.

Doesn’t work:

public interface IPersist {
    // stuff specific only to IPersist
}

public interface IPersistFolder : IPersist {
    // stuff specific only to IPersistFolder
}

Does work:

public interface IPersistFolder {
    // stuff specific to IPersist only
    // stuff specific to IPersistFolder only
}

The article notes this fact:

Lo and behold, it worked! Notice that
I’ve abandoned any idea that
IPersistFolder is inherited from
anything at all and just included the
stubs from IPersist right in its
definition. In all candor, I can’t
tell you why this is but it definitely
works just fine and shouldn’t give you
any problems.

So my I’ll ask the question this guy didn’t know; why didn’t the original code work?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T06:30:44+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:30 am

    COM doesn’t support inheritance. The COM interface declarations are defined in the SDK header files with inheritance, but they are intended to be parsed by a C++ compiler. It does support inheritance. The concrete implementation of the IPersistFile interface must provide an implementation of all methods, including those from IUnknown and IPersist. IUnknown is taken care of by the CLR.

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