Assume the following type definitions:
public interface IFoo<T> : IBar<T> {}
public class Foo<T> : IFoo<T> {}
How do I find out whether the type Foo
implements the generic interface IBar<T>
when only the mangled type is available?
By using the answer from TcKs it can also be done with the following LINQ query:
bool isBar = foo.GetType().GetInterfaces().Any(x =>
x.IsGenericType &&
x.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == typeof(IBar<>));
You have to go up through the inheritance tree and find all the interfaces for each class in the tree, and compare typeof(IBar<>)
with the result of calling Type.GetGenericTypeDefinition
if the interface is generic. It's all a bit painful, certainly.
See this answer and these ones for more info and code.
public interface IFoo<T> : IBar<T> {}
public class Foo : IFoo<Foo> {}
var implementedInterfaces = typeof( Foo ).GetInterfaces();
foreach( var interfaceType in implementedInterfaces ) {
if ( false == interfaceType.IsGeneric ) { continue; }
var genericType = interfaceType.GetGenericTypeDefinition();
if ( genericType == typeof( IFoo<> ) ) {
// do something !
break;
}
}
As a helper method extension
public static bool Implements<I>(this Type type, I @interface) where I : class
{
if(((@interface as Type)==null) || !(@interface as Type).IsInterface)
throw new ArgumentException("Only interfaces can be 'implemented'.");
return (@interface as Type).IsAssignableFrom(type);
}
Example usage:
var testObject = new Dictionary<int, object>();
result = testObject.GetType().Implements(typeof(IDictionary<int, object>)); // true!
I'm using a slightly simpler version of @GenericProgrammers extension method:
public static bool Implements<TInterface>(this Type type) where TInterface : class {
var interfaceType = typeof(TInterface);
if (!interfaceType.IsInterface)
throw new InvalidOperationException("Only interfaces can be implemented.");
return (interfaceType.IsAssignableFrom(type));
}
Usage:
if (!featureType.Implements<IFeature>())
throw new InvalidCastException();
To tackle the type system completely, I think you need to handle recursion, e.g. IList<T>
: ICollection<T>
: IEnumerable<T>
, without which you wouldn't know that IList<int>
ultimately implements IEnumerable<>
.
/// <summary>Determines whether a type, like IList<int>, implements an open generic interface, like
/// IEnumerable<>. Note that this only checks against *interfaces*.</summary>
/// <param name="candidateType">The type to check.</param>
/// <param name="openGenericInterfaceType">The open generic type which it may impelement</param>
/// <returns>Whether the candidate type implements the open interface.</returns>
public static bool ImplementsOpenGenericInterface(this Type candidateType, Type openGenericInterfaceType)
{
Contract.Requires(candidateType != null);
Contract.Requires(openGenericInterfaceType != null);
return
candidateType.Equals(openGenericInterfaceType) ||
(candidateType.IsGenericType && candidateType.GetGenericTypeDefinition().Equals(openGenericInterfaceType)) ||
candidateType.GetInterfaces().Any(i => i.IsGenericType && i.ImplementsOpenGenericInterface(openGenericInterfaceType));
}
In case you wanted an extension method that would support generic base types as well as interfaces, I've expanded sduplooy's answer:
public static bool InheritsFrom(this Type t1, Type t2)
{
if (null == t1 || null == t2)
return false;
if (null != t1.BaseType &&
t1.BaseType.IsGenericType &&
t1.BaseType.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == t2)
{
return true;
}
if (InheritsFrom(t1.BaseType, t2))
return true;
return
(t2.IsAssignableFrom(t1) && t1 != t2)
||
t1.GetInterfaces().Any(x =>
x.IsGenericType &&
x.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == t2);
}
You have to check against a constructed type of the generic interface.
You will have to do something like this:
foo is IBar<String>
because IBar<String>
represents that constructed type. The reason you have to do this is because if T
is undefined in your check, the compiler doesn't know if you mean IBar<Int32>
or IBar<SomethingElse>
.
First of all public class Foo : IFoo<T> {}
does not compile because you need to specify a class instead of T, but assuming you do something like public class Foo : IFoo<SomeClass> {}
then if you do
Foo f = new Foo();
IBar<SomeClass> b = f as IBar<SomeClass>;
if(b != null) //derives from IBar<>
Blabla();
Method to check if the type inherits or implements a generic type:
public static bool IsTheGenericType(this Type candidateType, Type genericType)
{
return
candidateType != null && genericType != null &&
(candidateType.IsGenericType && candidateType.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == genericType ||
candidateType.GetInterfaces().Any(i => i.IsGenericType && i.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == genericType) ||
candidateType.BaseType != null && candidateType.BaseType.IsTheGenericType(genericType));
}
Try the following extension.
public static bool Implements(this Type @this, Type @interface)
{
if (@this == null || @interface == null) return false;
return @interface.GenericTypeArguments.Length>0
? @interface.IsAssignableFrom(@this)
: @this.GetInterfaces().Any(c => c.Name == @interface.Name);
}
To test it. create
public interface IFoo { }
public interface IFoo<T> : IFoo { }
public interface IFoo<T, M> : IFoo<T> { }
public class Foo : IFoo { }
public class Foo<T> : IFoo { }
public class Foo<T, M> : IFoo<T> { }
public class FooInt : IFoo<int> { }
public class FooStringInt : IFoo<string, int> { }
public class Foo2 : Foo { }
and the test method
public void Test()
{
Console.WriteLine(typeof(Foo).Implements(typeof(IFoo)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<int>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<string>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<,>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooStringInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<,>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(FooStringInt).Implements(typeof(IFoo<string,int>)));
Console.WriteLine(typeof(Foo<int,string>).Implements(typeof(IFoo<string>)));
}
var genericType = typeof(ITest<>);
Console.WriteLine(typeof(Test).GetInterfaces().Any(x => x.GetGenericTypeDefinition().Equals(genericType))); // prints: "True"
interface ITest<T> { };
class Test : ITest<string> { }
This worked for me.
There shouldn't be anything wrong the following:
bool implementsGeneric = (anObject.Implements("IBar`1") != null);
For extra credit you could catch AmbiguousMatchException if you wanted to provide a specific generic-type-parameter with your IBar query.
bool implementsGeneric = (anObject.Implements(typeof(IBar<>).Name) != null);
Success story sharing
typeof(IBar<,,,>)
with commas acting like placeholders