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c# - Why is Task<T> not co-variant?

class ResultBase {}
class Result : ResultBase {}

Task<ResultBase> GetResult() {
    return Task.FromResult(new Result());
}

The compiler tells me that it cannot implicitly convert Task<Result> to Task<ResultBase>. Can someone explain why this is? I would have expected co-variance to enable me to write the code in this way.

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According to someone who may be in the know...

The justification is that the advantage of covariance is outweighed by the disadvantage of clutter (i.e. everyone would have to make a decision about whether to use Task or ITask in every single place in their code).

It sounds to me like there is not a very compelling motivation either way. ITask<out T> would require a lot of new overloads, probably quite a bit under the hood (I cannot attest to how the actual base class is implemented or how special it is compared to a naive implementation) but way more in the form of these linq-like extension methods.

Somebody else made a good point - the time would be better spent making classes covariant and contravariant. I don't know how hard that would be, but that sounds like a better use of time to me.

On the other hand, somebody mentioned that it would be very cool to have a real yield return like feature available in an async method. I mean, without sleight of hand.


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