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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T06:11:07+00:00 2026-05-11T06:11:07+00:00

I saw the following line of code: class Sample<T,U> where T:class where U: struct,

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I saw the following line of code:

class Sample<T,U> where T:class where U: struct, T 

In the case above, parameter U is value type, and it derives from reference type T.

How can that line be legal?
Also, if a value type inherits from a reference type, where is memory allocated: heap or stack?

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  1. 2026-05-11T06:11:08+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 6:11 am

    Contrary to another answer, there are types beyond T=System.Object where this compiles:

    class Samplewhere T:class where U:struct, T 

    The ‘T : class’ constraint doesn’t actually mean that T has to be a class. It means T has to be a reference type. That includes interfaces, and structs can implement interfaces. So, for example, T=IConvertible, U=System.Int32 works perfectly well.

    I can’t imagine this is a particularly common or useful constraint, but it’s not quite as counterintuitive as it seems at first sight.

    As to the more general point: as Obiwan Kenobi says, it all depends on your point of view. The CLI spec has quite a complicated explanation of this, where ‘derives from’ and ‘inherits from’ don’t mean quite the same thing, IIRC. But no, you can’t specify the base type of a value type – it’s always either System.ValueType or System.Enum (which derives from System.ValueType) and that’s picked on the basis of whether you’re declaring a struct or an enum. It’s somewhat confusing that both of these are, themselves, reference types…

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