Shadows vs Overloads in VB.NET
I have actually confirmed by compiling the same code with Shadows
vs Overloads
for a method with an identical name and signature in the base class and looking at the output from ildasm
for both. The only difference is the Overloads
case specifies hidebysig
.
The significance of this is best explained by Jon Skeet in this answer.
But simply it means there is only a real difference if the base class has overloads of the method being redefined:
Shadows
will cause all of those overloads to be uncallable through the derived class, where asOverloads
only replaces the one method.
Note that this is only a language construct and not enforced by the CLI (i.e. C# and VB.NET enforce this but other languages may not).
A simple code example:
Module Module1
Sub Main()
Dim a1 As C1 = New C2
Dim a2 As New C2
a1.M1()
a2.M1()
a1.M2()
a2.M2()
a1.M3()
a2.M3()
a1.M1(1)
' Overloads on M1() allows the M1(int) to be inherited/called.
a2.M1(1)
a1.M2(1)
' Shadows on M2() does not allow M2(int) to be called.
'a2.M2(1)
a1.M3(1)
' Shadows on M3() does not allow M3(int) to be called, even though it is Overridable.
'a2.M3(1)
If Debugger.IsAttached Then _
Console.ReadLine()
End Sub
End Module
Class C1
Public Sub M1()
Console.WriteLine("C1.M1")
End Sub
Public Sub M1(ByVal i As Integer)
Console.WriteLine("C1.M1(int)")
End Sub
Public Sub M2()
Console.WriteLine("C1.M2")
End Sub
Public Sub M2(ByVal i As Integer)
Console.WriteLine("C1.M2(int)")
End Sub
Public Overridable Sub M3()
Console.WriteLine("C1.M3")
End Sub
Public Overridable Sub M3(ByVal i As Integer)
Console.WriteLine("C1.M3(int)")
End Sub
End Class
Class C2
Inherits C1
Public Overloads Sub M1()
Console.WriteLine("C2.M1")
End Sub
Public Shadows Sub M2()
Console.WriteLine("C2.M2")
End Sub
Public Shadows Sub M3()
Console.WriteLine("C2.M3")
End Sub
' At compile time the different errors below show the variation.
' (Note these errors are the same irrespective of the ordering of the C2 methods.)
' Error: 'Public Overrides Sub M1(i As Integer)' cannot override 'Public Sub M1(i As Integer)' because it is not declared 'Overridable'.
'Public Overrides Sub M1(ByVal i As Integer)
' Console.WriteLine("C2.M1(int)")
'End Sub
' Errors: sub 'M3' cannot be declared 'Overrides' because it does not override a sub in a base class.
' sub 'M3' must be declared 'Shadows' because another member with this name is declared 'Shadows'.
'Public Overrides Sub M3(ByVal i As Integer)
' Console.WriteLine("C2.M3(int)")
'End Sub
End Class
The output of the above:
C1.M1
C2.M1
C1.M2
C2.M2
C1.M3
C2.M3
C1.M1(int)
C1.M1(int)
C1.M2(int)
C1.M3(int)
The output shows the Shadows
calls are used when C2
is called directly and not when called indirectly through C1
.
There are three closely related concepts; overriding, shadowing and overloading.
Overriding is when you make a new implementation for a virtual method.
Shadowing is when you make a new non-virtual implementation for a method.
Overloading is when you add a method with the same name but different parameters.
All three concepts are available both in C# and VB.