I created the Class1.GetChild<T>() where T : DependencyObject extension method in lib1.dll assembly. After that, all assemblies that depends on lib1.dll failed to compile with error:
The type 'System.Windows.DependencyObject' is defined in an assemebly that is not referenced. You must add a reference to assembly 'WindowsBase' etc...
Why dependent assemblies requires WindowsBase even if they don't use GetChild?
.
To reproduce (vs2010 .net4):
lib1.dll (references WindowsBase)
namespace lib1
{
public static class Class1
{
public static T GetChild<T>(this DependencyObject src) where T : DependencyObject
{
return default(T);
}
}
public static class Class2
{
public static int SomeExtMethod(this string src)
{
return 0;
}
}
}
lib2.dll (references lib1 but not WindowsBase)
using lib1;
class someClass
{
void someFct()
{
"foo".SomeExtMethod(); // error: The type 'System.Windows.DependencyObject'
// is defined in an assemebly that is not referenced.
// You must add a reference to assembly 'WindowsBase' etc..
}
}
.
Update:
I think there's definitly something when mixing generic methods and extension methods. I tried to demonstrate the issue in the following sample:
// lib0.dll
namespace lib0
{
public class Class0 { }
}
// lib1.dll
using lib0;
namespace lib1
{
public static class Class1
{
public static void methodA<T>() where T : Class0 { } // A
public static void methodB(Class0 e) { } // B
public static void methodC(this int src) { } // C
}
public static class Class2
{
public static void methodD(this String s) { }
}
}
// lib2.dll
using lib1;
class someClass
{
void someFct()
{
Class2.methodD(""); // always compile successfully
"".methodD(); // raise the 'must add reference to lib0' error depending on config. see details below.
}
}
A, //B, //C -> compile ok
A, B, //C -> compile ok
//A, B, C -> compile ok
A, //B, C -> raise error
A, B, C -> raise error
//A means methodA is commented. As Damien pointed out, type inference might play some role. Still curious to know the ins and outs.
lib1.dllwhen you do a build? Are you including the reference to that library as a Project reference or a reference to the dll itself? – Bobson Sep 24 '12 at 19:23lib2.dll. Both Project reference or dll reference produce the same error. – Thomas Sep 28 '12 at 14:10