I want to make a type that can be inherited from by types in the same assembly, but cannot be inherited from outside of the assembly. I do want the type to be visible outside of the assembly.
Is this possible?
I want to make a type that can be inherited from by types in the same assembly, but cannot be inherited from outside of the assembly. I do want the type to be visible outside of the assembly.
Is this possible?
I think this question could still benefit from a semantically correct answer... which is "no". You can't declare a type as "sealed to external assemblies only".
Don't get me wrong: dtb's answer is a good one. An internal constructor is the closest you can get from the desired result.
However, I think that anyone reading this should be aware that in this example,
MyClass
wouldn't be described as being sealed at runtime. It is unlikely that this will ever be a problem, but if may cause logic based on reflection (from your code or a 3rd party library) to act differently on this particular type. It's something to keep in mind.And now, to further expand on dtb's sample code:
This way you can still create instances of
MyClass
from outside the owning assembly, while still keeping control over inheritance.You can make the constructor internal:
Every class that derives from a base class must call a constructor of the base class in its constructor. Since it can't call the constructor if the base class is in a different assembly, the derived class doesn't compile.