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Table Of Contents
Fundamentals for Self-Taught Programmers
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You have learned in this chapter that OOP creates an abstract view of the things that we interact with so that we can use them in code. However, you can apply an additional level of abstraction to your classes in C# with abstract classes.
Let’s use our existing animal example to explain the concept. We now know that the Animal class doesn’t have enough members to describe all animals, but we also know that some members from derived classes of animals will not make sense in other derived classes. For example, a Cat or Dog class shouldn’t need a property for gills, like a Lizard class would, but all three animal types will have an age. It seems that the Animal class won’t ever be used by itself, only as a base class. It can be inverted into an abstract class so that the following apply: