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Home/ Questions/Q 7675327
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T16:56:12+00:00 2026-05-31T16:56:12+00:00

I have the following interface declarations: interface IOrder<T> where T: IOrderItem { IList<T> Items

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I have the following interface declarations:

interface IOrder<T> where T: IOrderItem
{
     IList<T> Items { get; set; }
}

interface IDistro<T> : IOrder<T> where T: IOrderItem
{

}

I have two concrete classes, like so:

// DistroItem implements IOrderItem
public class Distro : IDistro<DistroItem>
{
    public IList<DistroItem> Items { get; set; }
}

// PerishableOrderItem implements IOrderItem
public class PerishableOrder : IDistro<PerishableOrderItem>
{       
    public IList<PerishableOrderItem> Items { get; set; }
}

Lastly, I have a static service method for saving to the database:

public static void UpdateDistro(IDistro<IOrderItem> distro)
{

}

My problem is, how do I pass a distro of either concrete type to my static method? The following doesn’t compile:

Distro d = new Distro();
UpdateDistro(d);

The error is:

The best overloaded method match for UpdateDistro(IDistro<IOrderItem>)' has some invalid arguments

Is contravariance the answer? I tried adding <in T> to the original interface declaration, but that added more errors that I was unable to resolve. This is my first in depth foray into interfaces and I’m sure generics is adding complexity, so there might be a fundamental lack of understanding here.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T16:56:13+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 4:56 pm

    Have you tried this:

    public static void UpdateDistro<T>(IDistro<T> distro) 
      where T : IOrderItem
    {  
    } 
    

    EDIT:

    With empty implementations for DistroItem and PerishableItem classes (both implementing IOrderItem), I’ve got the following compiling without an error:

    Distro d = new Distro();
    PerishableOrder p = new PerishableOrder();
    
    UpdateDistro(d);
    UpdateDistro(p);
    
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