Question

class A 
 {
   public virtual void WhoAreYou() { Console.WriteLine("I am an A"); }
 }
class B : A
{
  public override void WhoAreYou() { Console.WriteLine("I am a B"); }
}
class C : B
{
 public new virtual void WhoAreYou() { Console.WriteLine("I am a C"); }
}
class D : C 
{
  public override void WhoAreYou() { Console.WriteLine("I am a D"); }
}


C c = new D();
c.WhoAreYou();// "I am a D"
A a = new D();
a.WhoAreYou();// "I am a B" !!!!

How the reference is allocated internally,reference A contains the reference of B? Can any one explain Whats going On?

Was it helpful?

Solution

In class C, the method WhoAreYou() doesn't override the base class method, as it is defined with new keyword which adds a new method with the same name which hides the base class method. That is why this:

C c = new D();
c.WhoAreYou();// "I am a D"

invokes the overridden method in D which overrides its base class method defined with new keyword.

However, when the target type is A, then this:

A a = new D();
a.WhoAreYou();// "I am a B" !!!!

invokes the overridden method in B, as you're calling the method on a of type A whose method is overriden by B.

OTHER TIPS

Your class C WhoAreYou() method is 'new', and therefor hiding the one from B. That means that the override in class D is overriding C's method instead of B's (which is overriding A's).

Since you have a reference to an A, the furthest down the hierarchy of it's WhoAreYou() function is the one in class B.

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/435f1dw2.aspx

It is mean, that the C's

public new virtual void WhoAreYou(){}

breaks the chain of virtual methods.

When you call the method WhoAreYou() of D by reference of A. The virtuality starts work, but it breaks at C.

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