CA1047: Do not declare protected members in sealed types
Property | Value |
---|---|
Rule ID | CA1047 |
Title | Do not declare protected members in sealed types |
Category | Design |
Fix is breaking or non-breaking | Non-breaking |
Enabled by default in .NET 9 | As suggestion |
Cause
A public type is sealed
(NotInheritable
in Visual basic) and declares a protected member or a protected nested type. This rule does not report violations for Finalize methods, which must follow this pattern.
Rule description
Types declare protected members so that inheriting types can access or override the member. By definition, you cannot inherit from a sealed type, which means that protected methods on sealed types cannot be called.
The C# compiler emits warning CS0628 instead of CA1047 for this situation.
How to fix violations
To fix a violation of this rule, change the access level of the member to private, or make the type inheritable.
When to suppress warnings
Do not suppress a warning from this rule. Leaving the type in its current state can cause maintenance issues and does not provide any benefits.
Configure code to analyze
Use the following option to configure which parts of your codebase to run this rule on.
You can configure this option for just this rule, for all rules it applies to, or for all rules in this category (Design) that it applies to. For more information, see Code quality rule configuration options.
Include specific API surfaces
You can configure which parts of your codebase to run this rule on, based on their accessibility. For example, to specify that the rule should run only against the non-public API surface, add the following key-value pair to an .editorconfig file in your project:
dotnet_code_quality.CAXXXX.api_surface = private, internal
Example
The following example shows a type that violates this rule.
public sealed class SealedClass
{
protected void ProtectedMethod(){}
}
Public NotInheritable Class BadSealedType
Protected Sub MyMethod
End Sub
End Class