Question

Suppose to have

enum SomeEnum { One, Two, Three };

SomeEnum is an enum so it is supposed to inherit from Enum so why if I write:

Dictionary<Enum, SomeClass> aDictionary = new Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass>();

The compiler complains that it cannot implicitly convert SomeEnum to Enum?

Was it helpful?

Solution

I believe that's because of covariance.

In short:

aDictionary will be a Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass>, but in the current context it is known as Dictionary<Enum, SomeClass>.

Had your declaration been allowed, the compiler should afterwards let you do:

aDictionary.Add(someValueFromAnotherEnumUnrelatedToSomeEnum, aValue);

which is obviously inconsistent with respect to the actual type of the dictionary.

That's why co-variance is not allowed by default and you have to explicitly enable it in cases where it makes sense.

The conclusion is that you have to specify the type exactly:

Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass> aDictionary = 
    new Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass>();

OTHER TIPS

Enum in its declaration is not a class that is equal to SomeEnum. It should be

Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass> aDictionary = new Dictionary<SomeEnum, SomeClass>();
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