Type.IsAbstract Property
Definition
Important
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Gets a value indicating whether the Type is abstract and must be overridden.
public:
property bool IsAbstract { bool get(); };
public bool IsAbstract { get; }
member this.IsAbstract : bool
Public ReadOnly Property IsAbstract As Boolean
Property Value
true
if the Type is abstract; otherwise, false
.
Implements
Examples
The following example creates an array of Type objects that represent the following types:contains type returns true
if the specified object is abstract
; otherwise, it returns false
.
AbstractClass
, an abstract class (a class marked asabstract
in C# andMustInherit
in Visual Basic).DerivedClass
, a class that inherits fromAbstractClass
.SingleClass
, a non-inheritable class. it's defined assealed
in C# andNotInheritable
in Visual Basic.ITypeInfo
, an interface.ImplementingClass
, a class that implements theITypeInfo
interface.
The method returns true
only for AbstractClass
, the abstract class, and ITypeInfo
, the interface.
using System;
public abstract class AbstractClass
{}
public class DerivedClass : AbstractClass
{}
public sealed class SingleClass
{}
public interface ITypeInfo
{
string GetName();
}
public class ImplementingClass : ITypeInfo
{
public string GetName()
{
return this.GetType().FullName;
}
}
delegate string InputOutput(string inp);
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
Type[] types= { typeof(AbstractClass),
typeof(DerivedClass),
typeof(ITypeInfo),
typeof(SingleClass),
typeof(ImplementingClass),
typeof(InputOutput) };
foreach (var type in types)
Console.WriteLine("{0} is abstract: {1}",
type.Name, type.IsAbstract);
}
}
// The example displays the following output:
// AbstractClass is abstract: True
// DerivedClass is abstract: False
// ITypeInfo is abstract: True
// SingleClass is abstract: False
// ImplementingClass is abstract: False
// InputOutput is abstract: False
[<AbstractClass>]
type AbstractClass() = class end
type DerivedClass() = inherit AbstractClass()
[<Sealed>]
type SingleClass() = class end
type ITypeInfo =
abstract GetName: unit -> string
type ImplementingClass() =
interface ITypeInfo with
member this.GetName() =
this.GetType().FullName
type DiscriminatedUnion =
| Yes
| No of string
type Record =
{ Name: string
Age: int }
type InputOutput = delegate of inp: string -> string
let types =
[ typeof<AbstractClass>
typeof<DerivedClass>
typeof<ITypeInfo>
typeof<SingleClass>
typeof<ImplementingClass>
typeof<DiscriminatedUnion>
typeof<Record>
typeof<InputOutput> ]
for typ in types do
printfn $"{typ.Name} is abstract: {typ.IsAbstract}"
// The example displays the following output:
// AbstractClass is abstract: True
// DerivedClass is abstract: False
// ITypeInfo is abstract: True
// SingleClass is abstract: False
// ImplementingClass is abstract: False
// DiscriminatedUnion is abstract: True
// Record is abstract: False
// InputOutput is abstract: False
Public MustInherit Class AbstractClass
End Class
Public Class DerivedClass : Inherits AbstractClass
End Class
Public NotInheritable Class SingleClass
End Class
Public Interface ITypeInfo
Function GetName() As String
End Interface
Public Class ImplementingClass : Implements ITypeInfo
Public Function GetName() As String _
Implements ITypeInfo.GetName
Return Me.GetType().FullName
End Function
End Class
Delegate Function InputOutput(inp As String) As String
Module Example
Public Sub Main()
Dim types() As Type = { GetType(AbstractClass),
GetType(DerivedClass),
GetType(ITypeInfo),
GetType(SingleClass),
GetType(ImplementingClass),
GetType(InputOutput) }
For Each type In types
Console.WriteLine("{0} is abstract: {1}",
type.Name, type.IsAbstract)
Next
End Sub
End Module
' The example displays the following output:
' AbstractClass is abstract: True
' DerivedClass is abstract: False
' ITypeInfo is abstract: True
' SingleClass is abstract: False
' ImplementingClass is abstract: False
' InputOutput is abstract: False
Remarks
The IsAbstract property returns true
in the following cases:
The current type is abstract; that is, it cannot be instantiated, but can only serve as the base class for derived classes. In C#, abstract classes are marked with the abstract keyword; in F#, they are marked with the AbstractClass attribute; in Visual Basic, they are marked with the MustInherit keyword.
The current type is an interface.
If the current Type represents a type parameter in the definition of a generic type or generic method, this property always returns false
.