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Home/ Questions/Q 436729
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T20:30:26+00:00 2026-05-12T20:30:26+00:00

I know that you can’t have a constructor in an interface, but here is

  • 0

I know that you can’t have a constructor in an interface, but here is what I want to do:

 interface ISomething 
 {
       void FillWithDataRow(DataRow)
 }


 class FooClass<T> where T : ISomething , new()
 {
      void BarMethod(DataRow row)
      {
           T t = new T()
           t.FillWithDataRow(row);
      }
  }

I would really like to replace ISomething‘s FillWithDataRow method with a constructor somehow.

That way, my member class could implement the interface and still be readonly (it can’t with the FillWithDataRow method).

Does anyone have a pattern that will do what I want?

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T20:30:27+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 8:30 pm

    (I should have checked first, but I’m tired – this is mostly a duplicate.)

    Either have a factory interface, or pass a Func<DataRow, T> into your constructor. (They’re mostly equivalent, really. The interface is probably better for Dependency Injection whereas the delegate is less fussy.)

    For example:

    interface ISomething 
    {      
        // Normal stuff - I assume you still need the interface
    }
    
    class Something : ISomething
    {
        internal Something(DataRow row)
        {
           // ...
        }         
    }
    
    class FooClass<T> where T : ISomething , new()
    {
        private readonly Func<DataRow, T> factory;
    
        internal FooClass(Func<DataRow, T> factory)
        {
            this.factory = factory;
        }
    
         void BarMethod(DataRow row)
         {
              T t = factory(row);
         }
     }
    
     ...
    
     FooClass<Something> x = new FooClass<Something>(row => new Something(row));
    
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