I'm having problems implementing IEnumerable<T>
in my custom collection class in C++/CLI. Here is the relevant part of the code:
using namespace System::Collections::Generic;
ref class MyCollection : IEnumerable<MyClass^>
{
public:
MyCollection()
{
}
virtual IEnumerator<MyClass^>^ GetEnumerator()
{
return nullptr;
}
};
When compiled, this results in the following errors:
error C2392: 'System::Collections::Generic::IEnumerator ^MyCollection::GetEnumerator(void)': covariant returns types are not supported in managed types, otherwise 'System::Collections::IEnumerator ^System::Collections::IEnumerable::GetEnumerator(void)' would be overridden error C3766: 'MyCollection' must provide an implementation for the interface method 'System::Collections::IEnumerator ^System::Collections::IEnumerable::GetEnumerator(void)'
This makes sense, since IEnumerable<T>
derives from IEnumerable
. However, I'm not sure how to fix this compil开发者_开发问答e error. If this was C#, I would implicitly implement IEnumerable
, however I'm not sure how to do that in C++/CLI (if that's even possible) like this:
class MyCollection : IEnumerable<MyClass>
{
public MyCollection()
{
}
public IEnumerator<MyClass> GetEnumerator()
{
return null;
}
System.Collections.IEnumerator System.Collections.IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
{
return GetEnumerator();
}
}
If I do add an implementation of IEnumerable::GetEnumerator()
, the compiler complains about two methods that differ only by return type (which also makes sense).
So, how do I implement IEnumerable<T>
in a C++/CLI class?
You must provide an explicit implementation of the non-generic GetEnumerator() method and include the non-generic namespace:
using namespace System::Collections;
....
virtual IEnumerator^ EnumerableGetEnumerator() = IEnumerable::GetEnumerator
{
return GetEnumerator<MyClass^>();
}
Update: As mentioned in the comments, the explicit version of GetEnumerator must be named different to avoid name clash, thus I've named it EnumerableGetEnumerator.
Similarly, in C# you would have to do it like this:
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class MyCollection : IEnumerable<MyClass>
{
public MyCollection()
{
}
public IEnumerator<MyClass> GetEnumerator()
{
return null;
}
IEnumerator IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
{
return GetEnumerator<MyClass>();
}
}
It is not very straightforward. Here is my stab at it. Fill in the "blanks". One of the biggest issues is the ambiguity if you use both Collections and Collections::Generic namespace. C++/CLI is really a pain.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;
public ref struct Enumerable : public Generic::IEnumerable<String^> {
public:
virtual Generic::IEnumerator<String^>^ GetEnumerator() sealed = Generic::IEnumerable<String^>::GetEnumerator {
return gcnew Enumerator();
}
virtual IEnumerator^ GetEnumeratorBase() sealed = IEnumerable::GetEnumerator {
return GetEnumerator();
}
private:
ref struct TagEnumerator : public Generic::IEnumerator<String^> {
public:
property String^ Current {
virtual String^ get() {
throw gcnew NotImplementedException();
}
};
property Object^ CurrentBase {
virtual Object^ get() sealed = IEnumerator::Current::get {
throw gcnew NotImplementedException();
}
};
virtual bool MoveNext() {
throw gcnew NotImplementedException();
}
virtual void Reset() {
throw gcnew NotImplementedException();
}
virtual ~Enumerator() {
}
};
};
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