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Interfaces describe the characteristics of properties, methods, and events, but leave the implementation details up to structures or classes.
This walkthrough demonstrates how to declare and implement an interface.
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This walkthrough doesn't provide information about how to create a user interface.
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Your computer might show different names or locations for some of the Visual Studio user interface elements in the following instructions. The Visual Studio edition that you have and the settings that you use determine these elements. For more information, see Personalizing the IDE.
Open a new Visual Basic Windows Application project.
Add a new module to the project by clicking Add Module on the Project menu.
Name the new module Module1.vb
and click Add. The code for the new module is displayed.
Define an interface named TestInterface
within Module1
by typing Interface TestInterface
between the Module
and End Module
statements, and then pressing ENTER. The Code Editor indents the Interface
keyword and adds an End Interface
statement to form a code block.
Define a property, method, and event for the interface by placing the following code between the Interface
and End Interface
statements:
Property Prop1() As Integer
Sub Method1(ByVal X As Integer)
Event Event1()
You may notice that the syntax used to declare interface members is different from the syntax used to declare class members. This difference reflects the fact that interfaces cannot contain implementation code.
Add a class named ImplementationClass
by adding the following statement to Module1
, after the End Interface
statement but before the End Module
statement, and then pressing ENTER:
Class ImplementationClass
If you are working within the integrated development environment, the Code Editor supplies a matching End Class
statement when you press ENTER.
Add the following Implements
statement to ImplementationClass
, which names the interface the class implements:
Implements TestInterface
When listed separately from other items at the top of a class or structure, the Implements
statement indicates that the class or structure implements an interface.
If you are working within the integrated development environment, the Code Editor implements the class members required by TestInterface
when you press ENTER, and you can skip the next step.
If you are not working within the integrated development environment, you must implement all the members of the interface MyInterface
. Add the following code to ImplementationClass
to implement Event1
, Method1
, and Prop1
:
Event Event1() Implements TestInterface.Event1
Public Sub Method1(ByVal X As Integer) Implements TestInterface.Method1
End Sub
Public Property Prop1() As Integer Implements TestInterface.Prop1
Get
End Get
Set(ByVal value As Integer)
End Set
End Property
The Implements
statement names the interface and interface member being implemented.
Complete the definition of Prop1
by adding a private field to the class that stored the property value:
' Holds the value of the property.
Private pval As Integer
Return the value of the pval
from the property get accessor.
Return pval
Set the value of pval
in the property set accessor.
pval = value
Complete the definition of Method1
by adding the following code.
MsgBox("The X parameter for Method1 is " & X)
RaiseEvent Event1()
Right-click the startup form for your project in the Solution Explorer, and click View Code. The editor displays the class for your startup form. By default, the startup form is called Form1
.
Add the following testInstance
field to the Form1
class:
Dim WithEvents testInstance As TestInterface
By declaring testInstance
as WithEvents
, the Form1
class can handle its events.
Add the following event handler to the Form1
class to handle events raised by testInstance
:
Sub EventHandler() Handles testInstance.Event1
MsgBox("The event handler caught the event.")
End Sub
Add a subroutine named Test
to the Form1
class to test the implementation class:
Sub Test()
' Create an instance of the class.
Dim T As New ImplementationClass
' Assign the class instance to the interface.
' Calls to the interface members are
' executed through the class instance.
testInstance = T
' Set a property.
testInstance.Prop1 = 9
' Read the property.
MsgBox("Prop1 was set to " & testInstance.Prop1)
' Test the method and raise an event.
testInstance.Method1(5)
End Sub
The Test
procedure creates an instance of the class that implements MyInterface
, assigns that instance to the testInstance
field, sets a property, and runs a method through the interface.
Add code to call the Test
procedure from the Form1 Load
procedure of your startup form:
Private Sub Form1_Load(ByVal sender As System.Object,
ByVal e As System.EventArgs) Handles MyBase.Load
Test() ' Test the class.
End Sub
Run the Test
procedure by pressing F5. The message "Prop1 was set to 9" is displayed. After you click OK, the message "The X parameter for Method1 is 5" is displayed. Click OK, and the message "The event handler caught the event" is displayed.
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กิจกรรม
AI-alkalmazások és -ügynökök létrehozása
17 มี.ค. 21 - 21 มี.ค. 10
Csatlakozzon a meetup sorozathoz, hogy valós használati esetek alapján, skálázható AI-megoldásokat hozzon létre más fejlesztőkkel és szakértőkkel.
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