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Indexers in Interfaces (C# Programming Guide) 

Indexers can be declared on an interface (C# Reference). Accessors of interface indexers differ from the accessors of class indexers in the following ways:

  • Interface accessors do not use modifiers.

  • An interface accessor does not have a body.

Thus, the purpose of the accessor is to indicate whether the indexer is read-write, read-only, or write-only.

The following is an example of an interface indexer accessor:

public interface ISomeInterface
{
    //...

    // Indexer declaration:
    string this[int index]
    {
        get;
        set;
    }
}

The signature of an indexer must differ from the signatures of all other indexers declared in the same interface.

Example

The following example shows how to implement interface indexers.

// Indexer on an interface:
public interface ISomeInterface
{
    // Indexer declaration:
    int this[int index]
    {
        get;
        set;
    }
}

// Implementing the interface.
class IndexerClass : ISomeInterface
{
    private int[] arr = new int[100];
    public int this[int index]   // indexer declaration
    {
        get
        {
            // Check the index limits.
            if (index < 0 || index >= 100)
            {
                return 0;
            }
            else
            {
                return arr[index];
            }
        }
        set
        {
            if (!(index < 0 || index >= 100))
            {
                arr[index] = value;
            }
        }
    }
}

class MainClass
{
    static void Main()
    {
        IndexerClass test = new IndexerClass();
        // Call the indexer to initialize the elements #2 and #5.
        test[2] = 4;
        test[5] = 32;
        for (int i = 0; i <= 10; i++)
        {
            System.Console.WriteLine("Element #{0} = {1}", i, test[i]);
        }
    }
}

Output

Element #0 = 0

Element #1 = 0

Element #2 = 4

Element #3 = 0

Element #4 = 0

Element #5 = 32

Element #6 = 0

Element #7 = 0

Element #8 = 0

Element #9 = 0

Element #10 = 0

In the preceding example, you could use the explicit interface member implementation by using the fully qualified name of the interface member. For example:

public string ISomeInterface.this 
{ 
} 

However, the fully qualified name is only needed to avoid ambiguity when the class is implementing more than one interface with the same indexer signature. For example, if an Employee class is implementing two interfaces, ICitizen and IEmployee, and both interfaces have the same indexer signature, the explicit interface member implementation is necessary. That is, the following indexer declaration:

public string IEmployee.this 
{ 
} 

implements the indexer on the IEmployee interface, while the following declaration:

public string ICitizen.this 
{ 
} 

implements the indexer on the ICitizen interface.

See Also

Tasks

Indexers Sample

Reference

Indexers (C# Programming Guide)
Properties (C# Programming Guide)
Interfaces (C# Programming Guide)

Concepts

C# Programming Guide