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MustInherit

Specifies that a class can be used only as a base class and that you cannot create an object directly from it.

Remarks

The purpose of a base class (also known as an abstract class) is to define functionality that is common to all the classes derived from it. This saves the derived classes from having to redefine the common elements. In some cases, this common functionality is not complete enough to make a usable object, and each derived class defines the missing functionality. In such a case, you want the consuming code to create objects only from the derived classes. You use MustInherit on the base class to enforce this.

Another use of a MustInherit class is to restrict a variable to a set of related classes. You can define a base class and derive all these related classes from it. The base class does not need to provide any functionality common to all the derived classes, but it can serve as a filter for assigning values to variables. If your consuming code declares a variable as the base class, Visual Basic allows you to assign only an object from one of the derived classes to that variable.

The .NET Framework defines several MustInherit classes, among them Array, Enum, and ValueType. ValueType is an example of a base class that restricts a variable. All value types derive from ValueType. If you declare a variable as ValueType, you can assign only value types to that variable.

Rules

  • Declaration Context. You can use MustInherit only in a Class statement.

  • Combined Modifiers. You cannot specify MustInherit together with NotInheritable in the same declaration.

Example

The following example illustrates both forced inheritance and forced overriding. The base class shape defines a variable acrossLine. The classes circle and square derive from shape. They inherit the definition of acrossLine, but they must define the function area because that calculation is different for each kind of shape.

Public MustInherit Class shape
    Public acrossLine As Double 
    Public MustOverride Function area() As Double 
End Class 
Public Class circle : Inherits shape
    Public Overrides Function area() As Double 
        Return Math.PI * acrossLine
    End Function 
End Class 
Public Class square : Inherits shape
    Public Overrides Function area() As Double 
        Return acrossLine * acrossLine
    End Function 
End Class 
Public Class consumeShapes
    Public Sub makeShapes()
        Dim shape1, shape2 As shape
        shape1 = New circle
        shape2 = New square
    End Sub 
End Class

You can declare shape1 and shape2 to be of type shape. However, you cannot create an object from shape because it lacks the functionality of the function area and is marked MustInherit.

Because they are declared as shape, the variables shape1 and shape2 are restricted to objects from the derived classes circle and square. Visual Basic does not allow you to assign any other object to these variables, which gives you a high level of type safety.

Usage

The MustInherit modifier can be used in this context:

Class Statement

See Also

Reference

Inherits Statement

NotInheritable

Visual Basic Language Keywords

Other Resources

Inheritance in Visual Basic