In Java I can specify generic with wildcard “?”. It is possible to create a map like this one:
Map<String, ?>.
I’m working with C# and I need a Dictionary<String, SomeInterface<?>> (where ? can be int, double, any type). Is this possible in C#?
EDIT:
Example:
interface ISomeInterface<out T>{
T Method();
void methodII();
}
class ObjectI : ISomeInterface<int>{
...
}
class ObjectII : ISomeInterface<double>{
...
}
class ObjectIII : ISomeInterface<string>{
....
}
I was trying to map this objects into Dictionary like:
Dictionary<String, ISomeInterface<?>> _objs = new Dictionary<String, ISomeInterface<?>();
_objs.Add("Object1", new ObjectI());
_objs.Add("Object2", new ObjectII());
_objs.Add("Object3", new ObjectII());
foreach(var keyVal in _objs){
Console.WriteLine(keyVal.Method());
}
Objects that implement ISomeInterface are loaded in runtime using Assembly and Activator.createInstance. In the moment of creation I don’t if objects implements ISomeInterface<int> or ISomeInterface<double>.
Any help is very much appreciated.
No.
However, if you’re using C# 4, you can make
ISomeInterfacecovariant so thatISomeInterface<Anything>will be convertible toISomeInterface<object>.If
ISomeInterfacehas methods that take parameters of its type parameter (as opposed to return values), this will be completely impossible, since it would then allow you to pass arbitrary objects as the parameters.EDIT: In your specific case, the best solution is to make
IMyInterface<T>inherit a separate non-genericIMyInterfaceinterface and move all members that don’t involveTto the base interface.You can then use a
Dictionary<string, IMyInterface>and you won’t have any trouble.