is this possible to somehow, have this scenario, where A.N inherits code from A with this code example?
The reason for setting it up like this, is that I need multiple classes that inherit from Base<TType>
and the Nested : Base<TType>
where the server has the base only, and the client has the extended Nested. This way, it would be easy to use the code, where they would have some shared code between themselves & each other.
The problem is that I would have to write identical code inside the
A and A.N
B and B.N
C and C.N
etc.
I have solved this temporarily, by replacing the Nested abstract class, with an Interface and doing
A.N : A, INested
, but now I have to rewrite the Base<TType>.Nested
code again inside all the Nested classes. For now, the nested class is small & managable.
hope this isn't a confusing question...
public abstract class Base<TType> where TType : class
{
public TType data;
internal void CommonCodeForAll() { }
public abstract void Update();
public abstract class Nested : Base<TType>
{
public abstract void Input();
}
}
public class A : Base<someClass>
{
public float Somevariable;
public void SpecificFunctionToA() { }
public override void Update()
{
// code that gets executed on server & client side that is unique to A
}
public class N : A.Nested
{
public override void Input()
{
if (data.IsReady()) { Somevariable *= 2; }
SpecificFunctionToA();
}
}
}
public class B : Base<anotherClass>
{
public float Somevariable;
public int index;
public int[] Grid;
public void SomethingElse() { }
public override void Update()
{
// code that gets executed on server & client side that is unique to B
}
public class N : B.Nested
{
public override void Input()
{
if (Grid[index] == -1) { SomethingElse(); }
data.Somevariable = Grid[index];
}
}
}
Edit:
I updated the code example to show what I'm trying to achieve.
Why I am trying to do this, is to keep the physics, networking & User input seperate.
There are multiple different controllers where each one has their own pack & unpacking functions, controller identity & access to the physics engine.