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Home/ Questions/Q 5997245
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T00:14:10+00:00 2026-05-23T00:14:10+00:00

On MSDN – C# Programming guide Constraints on Type Parameters , it says: where

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On MSDN – C# Programming guide Constraints on Type Parameters, it says:

where T : interface_name

The type
argument must be or implement the
specified interface. Multiple
interface constraints can be
specified. The constraining interface
can also be generic.

Could somebody kindly explain, what it means to have a generic interface? And explain how that can be a constraint and what it provides?

A simple example and a simple explanation is highly appreciated.

Many thanks in advance : )

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T00:14:10+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 12:14 am

    An example of a generic interface is IEnumerable<T>. It represents some collection you can enumerate. The type of the items in the collection is not relevant to the interface, so it allows you to specify that with a generic parameter.

    You can for example create a class like this:

    class Foo<T, E> where T : IEnumerable<E>
    { }
    

    This way, the generic parameter T can only be a collection of type E. The constraining interface is generic as well. You can also do this:

    class Foo<T> where T : IEnumerable<string>
    { }
    

    In which case you’re not allowing any type of collection, only collections of strings. You can go pretty crazy with this, like this:

    class Foo<T> where T : IEnumerable<T>
    { }
    

    Where T has to be some collection that contains collections of T.

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