Let's say we have an interface like
public interface IEnumerable<out T>
{ /*...*/ }
that is co-variant in T.
Then we have another interface and a class implementing it:
public interface ISomeInterface {}
public class SomeClass : ISomeInterface
{}
Now the co-variance allows us to do the following
IEnumerable<ISomeInterface> e = Enumerable.Empty<SomeClass>();
So a IEnumerable<SomeClass> is assignable to a variable (or method parameter) of type IEnumerable<ISomeInterface>.
But if we try this in a generic method:
public void GenericMethod<T>(IEnumerable<T> p) where T : ISomeInterface
{
IEnumerable<ISomeInterface> e = p;
// or
TestMethod(p);
}
public void TestMethod(IEnumerable<ISomeInterface> x) {}
we get the compiler error CS0266 telling us that an IEnumerable<T> cannot be converted to an IEnumerable<ISomeInterface>.
The constraint clearly states the T is derived from ISomeInterface, and since IEnumerable<T> is co-variant in T, this assignment should work (as shown above).
Is there any technical reason why this cannot work in a generic method? Or anything I missed that makes it too expensive for the compiler to figure it out?