The IEquatable<T>
interface has only one method in it: Equals(<T>)
. If you’ve already written
Equals(T)
, there’s no reason not to explicitly implement IEquatable<T>
. Doing so expands the utility of your class by
allowing it to be used where an IEquatable
is called for.
Note: Classes that implement IEquatable<T>
should also be sealed
.
Noncompliant code example
class MyClass // Noncompliant
{
public bool Equals(MyClass other)
{
//...
}
}
Compliant solution
sealed class MyClass : IEquatable<MyClass>
{
public override bool Equals(object other)
{
return Equals(other as MyClass);
}
public bool Equals(MyClass other)
{
//...
}
}