virtual (C# Reference)
The virtual keyword is used to modify a method, property, indexer or event declaration, and allow it to be overridden in a derived class. For example, this method can be overridden by any class that inherits it:
public virtual double Area()
{
return x * y;
}
The implementation of a virtual member can be changed by an overriding member in a derived class. For more information on using the virtual keyword, see Versioning with the Override and New Keywords (C# Programming Guide) and Knowing When to Use Override and New Keywords (C# Programming Guide).
Remarks
When a virtual method is invoked, the run-time type of the object is checked for an overriding member. The overriding member in the most derived class is called, which might be the original member, if no derived class has overridden the member.
By default, methods are non-virtual. You cannot override a non-virtual method.
You cannot use the virtual modifier with the static, abstract and override modifiers.
Virtual properties behave like abstract methods, except for the differences in declaration and invocation syntax.
It is an error to use the virtual modifier on a static property.
A virtual inherited property can be overridden in a derived class by including a property declaration that uses the override modifier.
Example
In this example, the class Dimensions
contains the two coordinates x
, y
, and the Area()
virtual method. Different shape classes such as Circle
, Cylinder
, and Sphere
inherit the Dimensions
class, and the surface area is calculated for each figure. Each derived class has it own override implementation of Area()
. The program calculates and displays the proper area for each figure by invoking the proper implementation of Area()
according to the object associated with the method.
Notice that the inherited classes Circle
, Sphere
, and Cylinder
are all using constructors that initialize the base class, for example:
public Cylinder(double r, double h): base(r, h) {}
This is analogous to the C++ initialization list.
// cs_virtual_keyword.cs
using System;
class TestClass
{
public class Dimensions
{
public const double PI = Math.PI;
protected double x, y;
public Dimensions()
{
}
public Dimensions(double x, double y)
{
this.x = x;
this.y = y;
}
public virtual double Area()
{
return x * y;
}
}
public class Circle : Dimensions
{
public Circle(double r) : base(r, 0)
{
}
public override double Area()
{
return PI * x * x;
}
}
class Sphere : Dimensions
{
public Sphere(double r) : base(r, 0)
{
}
public override double Area()
{
return 4 * PI * x * x;
}
}
class Cylinder : Dimensions
{
public Cylinder(double r, double h) : base(r, h)
{
}
public override double Area()
{
return 2 * PI * x * x + 2 * PI * x * y;
}
}
static void Main()
{
double r = 3.0, h = 5.0;
Dimensions c = new Circle(r);
Dimensions s = new Sphere(r);
Dimensions l = new Cylinder(r, h);
// Display results:
Console.WriteLine("Area of Circle = {0:F2}", c.Area());
Console.WriteLine("Area of Sphere = {0:F2}", s.Area());
Console.WriteLine("Area of Cylinder = {0:F2}", l.Area());
}
}
Output
Area of Circle = 28.27 Area of Sphere = 113.10 Area of Cylinder = 150.80
C# Language Specification
For more information, see the following sections in the C# Language Specification:
1.6.5.4 Virtual, override and abstract methods
10.5.3 Virtual methods
10.6.3 Virtual, sealed, override, and abstract accessors
See Also
Reference
Modifiers (C# Reference)
C# Keywords
abstract (C# Reference)
override (C# Reference)
new (C# Reference)
Concepts
C# Programming Guide
Polymorphism (C# Programming Guide)