Digital Garden
Computer Science
C#
Inheritance

Inheritance

Inheritance works pretty much the same as in java. Constructors are not inherited. Inherited methods can be overwritten. Classes can only inherit from a single base class, if there is no explicit super class then it inherits from object.

class B : A // subclass (inherits from A, extends
{
 int b;
public B() {...}
public void G() {...}
}

Overriding methods

Only virtual methods can be overridden in subclasses. Properties and indexers can also be overridden (virtual, override). Static methods can not be overridden.

class A
{
public void F() {...} // cannot be overridden
public virtual void G() {...} // can be overridden in a subclass
}
 
class B : A
{
public void F() {...} // warning: hides inherited F(), should add new before
public void G() {...} // warning: hides inherited G(), should add new before
public override void G() {...} // ok: overrides inherited G()
}

Hiding methods

In Method Hiding you can hide the implementation of the methods of a base class from the derived class using the new keyword. Or in other words, in method hiding, you can redefine the method of the base class in the derived class by using the new keyword.

public class MyParent {
    public void Show()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("This is my parent class.");
    }
}
 
public class MyChild : MyParent {
    // Hide the method of base class using new keyword
    public new void Show() {
        Console.WriteLine("This is my child class.");
    }
}
 
public class GFG {
    static public void Main()
    {
        MyChild obj = new MyChild();
        obj.Show(); // This is my child class.
  ((MyParent)obj).Show(); // This is my parent class.
  MyParent par = obj;
  par.Show(); // This is my parent class.
    }
}