Can someone explain to me why the below code outputs what it does?
I'll explain briefly here; a longer explanation can be found here.
The crux of the matter is determining the meaning of B
in class C : B
. Consider a version without generics: (for brevity I'll omit the publics.)
class D { class E {} }
class J {
class E {}
class K : D {
E e; // Fully qualify this type
}
}
That could be J.E
or D.E
; which is it? The rule in C# when resolving a name is to look at the base class hierarchy, and only if that fails, then look at your container. K already has a member E by inheritance, so it does not need to look at its container to discover that its container has a member E by containment.
But we see that the puzzle has this same structure; it's just obfuscated by the generics. We can treat the generic like a template and just write out the constructions of A-of-string and A-of-int as classes:
class A_of_int
{
class B : A_of_int
{
void M() { Write("int"); }
class C : B { } // A_of_int.B
}
}
class A_of_string
{
class B : A_of_int
{
void M() { Write("string"); }
class C : B {} // still A_of_int.B
}
}
And now it should be clear why A_of_string.B.M()
writes string
but A_of_string.B.C.M()
writes int
.
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