質問

Let's go straight to it :

Old code :

public interface IFoo {}
public class Foo : IFoo {}
...
public static IFoo Bar() { return new Foo(); }

New code :

public static Foo Bar() { return new Foo(); }

Obviously there should be no problem here, everything you were doing on the old return type, you can still do on the new return type, any is, as or cast should behave the same as before...

So did I break binary compatibility, or can I just release it as a minor version without bothering users ?

役に立ちましたか?

解決

This breaks binary compatibility, but not (most) compile-time compatibility issues, so it's typically an easy migration.

Note that it can even be a compile-time break if the client code constructs a delegate from the method.

他のヒント

You could have problems with people who have created unit tests around your code. Because it's static people could have created a FooAdapater as follows:-

public class FooAdapater(){ 
public IFoo GetFoo() { Return your static Bar; }
}

They could then create a mocked foo adapter than returns a mocked foo. Your code would break this scenario.

So, no it's not binary compatible :-)

ライセンス: CC-BY-SA帰属
所属していません StackOverflow
scroll top