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You're reading from  Refactoring with C#

Product typeBook
Published inNov 2023
Reading LevelIntermediate
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781835089989
Edition1st Edition
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Matt Eland
Matt Eland
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Matt Eland

Matt Eland is a Microsoft MVP in Artificial Intelligence (AI) who has been working with .NET since 2001. Matt has served as a senior engineer, software engineering manager, and .NET programming instructor. He is currently an AI specialist and senior consultant at Leading EDJE near Columbus, Ohio, where he helps companies with their software engineering and data science needs using C# and related technologies. Matt speaks and writes in his community and co-organizes the Central Ohio .NET Developers Group while pursuing a master's degree in data analytics.
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Controlling inheritance with abstract

Now that we’ve covered some refactoring patterns around inheritance, let’s look at using abstract classes and other C# features to restrict our classes and ensure they’re used appropriately.

Communicating intent with abstract

One quirk about our current design is that it is possible to instantiate a new instance of FlightInfoBase simply by writing the following code:

FlightInfoBase flight = new FlightInfoBase();

While it might not make sense to you – for a new flight to exist that isn’t explicitly a passenger or freight flight, because the FlightInfoBase class is not marked as abstract – there’s nothing preventing anyone from instantiating it.

To mark a class as abstract, add the abstract keyword to its signature:

FlightInfoBase.cs

public abstract class FlightInfoBase : IFlightInfo {
  public Airport ArrivalLocation { get; set; }
  public DateTime ArrivalTime...
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Refactoring with C#
Published in: Nov 2023Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781835089989

Author (1)

author image
Matt Eland

Matt Eland is a Microsoft MVP in Artificial Intelligence (AI) who has been working with .NET since 2001. Matt has served as a senior engineer, software engineering manager, and .NET programming instructor. He is currently an AI specialist and senior consultant at Leading EDJE near Columbus, Ohio, where he helps companies with their software engineering and data science needs using C# and related technologies. Matt speaks and writes in his community and co-organizes the Central Ohio .NET Developers Group while pursuing a master's degree in data analytics.
Read more about Matt Eland