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Home/ Questions/Q 6179927
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 24, 20262026-05-24T00:45:19+00:00 2026-05-24T00:45:19+00:00

I’ve got 2 classes (MyClass1 and MyClass2) that both inherit from MyBaseClass. I want

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I’ve got 2 classes (MyClass1 and MyClass2) that both inherit from MyBaseClass.

I want to write a function that takes a List of either of these as a parameter, like this

private void DoStuff(List<MyBaseClass> input)

{

...

}

How do I pass a List to this function?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-24T00:45:19+00:00Added an answer on May 24, 2026 at 12:45 am

    You can’t do it quite like that, as a List<MyClass1> isn’t a List<MyBaseClass>. Search on Stack Overflow for generic variance for explanations of why that’s the case.

    One thing you can do is make it generic:

    private void DoStuff<T>(List<T> input) where T : MyBaseClass
    

    Alternatively, in C# 4 and .NET 4, if you only need to iterate over it, you could use IEnumerable<T> which is covariant in T:

    private void DoStuff(IEnumerable<MyBaseClass> input)
    
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