Fluent interfaces and inheritance in C#
Try to use some Extension methods.
static class FluentManager
{
public static T WithFirstName<T>(this T person, string firstName) where T : FluentPerson
{
person.FirstName = firstName;
return person;
}
public static T WithId<T>(this T customer, long id) where T : FluentCustomer
{
customer.ID = id;
return customer;
}
}
class FluentPerson
{
public string FirstName { private get; set; }
public string LastName { private get; set; }
public override string ToString()
{
return string.Format("First name: {0} last name: {1}", FirstName, LastName);
}
}
class FluentCustomer : FluentPerson
{
public long ID { private get; set; }
public long AccountNumber { private get; set; }
public override string ToString()
{
return base.ToString() + string.Format(" account number: {0} id: {1}", AccountNumber, ID);
}
}
after you can use like
new FluentCustomer().WithId(22).WithFirstName("dfd").WithId(32);
You can use generics to achieve that.
public class FluentPerson<T>
where T : FluentPerson<T>
{
public T WithFirstName(string firstName)
{
// ...
return (T)this;
}
public T WithLastName(string lastName)
{
// ...
return (T)this;
}
}
public class FluentCustomer : FluentPerson<FluentCustomer>
{
public FluentCustomer WithAccountNumber(string accountNumber)
{
// ...
return this;
}
}
And now:
var customer = new FluentCustomer()
.WithAccountNumber("123")
.WithFirstName("Abc")
.WithLastName("Def")
.ToString();
Logically you need to configure stuff from most specific (customer) to least specific (person) or otherwise it is even hard to read it despite the fluent interface. Following this rule in most cases you won't need get into trouble. If however for any reason you still need to mix it you can use intermediate emphasizing statements like
static class Customers
{
public static Customer AsCustomer(this Person person)
{
return (Customer)person;
}
}
customer.WIthLastName("Bob").AsCustomer().WithId(10);