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Home/ Questions/Q 702779
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T03:45:30+00:00 2026-05-14T03:45:30+00:00

I have generic type that looks like: public class GenericClass<T, U> where T :

  • 0

I have generic type that looks like:

public class GenericClass<T, U> where T : IComparable<T>
{
    // Class definition here
}

I then have a collection of these instances. What is the cleanest way to pass through the type constraints?

public class GenericCollection<V> where V : GenericClass<T, U> // This won't compile
{
    private GenericClass<T, U>[] entries;

    public V this[index]
    {
        get{ return this.entries[index]; }
    }
}

Is there perhaps a better way to design this? I think that specifying

GenericCollection<T, U, V> where V : GenericClass<T, U> 

seems awkward. Might be my only option though….

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T03:45:31+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:45 am

    When creating a generic class, all generic type parameters of all objects used in all members of the generic class must be resolvable at compile time.

    You can have type parameters that are specific instances of other generic types – for example:

    public class GenericCollection<T> where T : GenericClass<int, string> { ... }
    

    But if you want the type parameters of GenericClass to be generic themselves, then all of those types need to be part of the class declaration, as you’ve written:

    GenericCollection<T, U, V> where V : GenericClass<T, U> 
    

    Sorry if it seems awkward, but that’s your only option.

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