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Home/ Questions/Q 6554199
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T12:40:18+00:00 2026-05-25T12:40:18+00:00

If I have two classes: public class A { } public class B :

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If I have two classes:

public class A { }
public class B : A { }

and I create a generic container and a function that takes it:

public void Foo(List<A> lst) { ... }

I get an invalid conversion if I attempt casting a List<B> to a List<A>, and instead have to pass it like so:

var derivedList = new List<B>();
Foo(new List<A>(derivedList));

Is there some way to pass a List<B> to this function without the overhead of allocating a brand new list, or does C# not support converting from a generic container of a derived type to its base type?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T12:40:18+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 12:40 pm

    A List<B> simply isn’t a List<A> – after all, you can add a plain A to a List<A>, but not to a List<B>.

    If you’re using C# 4 and .NET 4 and your Foo method only really needs to iterate over the list, then change the method to:

    public void Foo(IEnumerable<A> lst) { ... }
    

    In .NET 4, IEnumerable<T> is covariant in T, which allows a conversion from IEnumerable<B> (including a List<B>) to IEnumerable<A>. This is safe because values only ever flow “out” of IEnumerable<A>.

    For a much more detailed look at this, you can watch the video of the session I gave at NDC 2010 as part of the torrent of NDC 2010 videos.

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