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You're reading from  Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2022
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837636877
Edition7th Edition
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Author (1)
Harrison Ferrone
Harrison Ferrone
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Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
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Namespace conflicts and type aliasing

As your applications get more complicated, you’ll start to section off your code into namespaces, ensuring that you have control over where and when it’s accessed. You’ll also use third-party software tools and plugins to save on time implementing a feature from the ground up that someone else has already made available. Both of these scenarios show that you’re progressing with your programming knowledge, but they can also cause namespace conflicts.

Namespace conflicts happen when there are two or more classes or types with the same name, which happens more than you’d think.

Good naming habits tend to produce similar results, and before you know it, you’re dealing with multiple classes named Error or Extension, and Visual Studio is throwing out errors. Luckily, C# has a simple solution to these situations: type aliasing.

Defining a type alias lets you explicitly choose which conflicting type...

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Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition
Published in: Nov 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837636877

Author (1)

author image
Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
Read more about Harrison Ferrone