I have a parent and child class that both need to implement IDisposable
. Where should virtual
(and base.Dispose()
?) calls come into play? When I just override the Dispose(bool disposing)
call, it feels really strange stating that I implement IDisposable
without having an explicit Dispose()
function (just utilizing the inherited one), but having everything else.
What I had been doing (trivialized quite a bit):
internal class FooBase : IDisposable
{
Socket baseSocket;
private void SendNormalShutdown() { }
public void Dispose()
{
Dispose(true);
GC.SuppressFinalize(this);
}
private bool _disposed = false;
protected virtual void Dispose(bool disposing)
{
if (!_disposed)
{
if (disposing)
{
SendNormalShutdown();
}
baseSocket.Close();
}
}
~FooBase()
{
Dispose(false);
}
}
internal class Foo : FooBase, IDisposable
{
Socket extraSocket;
private bool _disposed = false;
protected override void Dispose(bool disposing)
{
if (!_disposed)
{
extraSocket.Close();
}
base.Dispose(disposing);
}
~Foo()
{
Dispose(false);
}
}
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