We cannot modify the access modifiers when overriding a virtual method in derived class.
That statement is false. You can and must change the access modifiers when in precisely the situation you describe. In other situations you must not change the access modifiers.
I refer you to section 10.6.4 of the specification, which states:
an override declaration cannot change
the accessibility of the virtual
method. However, if the overridden
base method is protected internal and
it is declared in a different assembly
than the assembly containing the
override method then the override
method’s declared accessibility must
be protected.
The reasoning is straightforward.
You, Asad, have a bank account, BankAccount.
You have a House. You rent a room in House to your best friend Charlie.
Charlie has a son, David, who lives in an Apartment.
You have a son, Elroy, who lives in a Condo.
Elroy has a son, your grandson, Frank, who lives in a Yurt.
Elroy has a best friend Greg who lives in the Condo with him.
You grant access to your BankAccount to yourself, to anyone living in House, and to any of your descendents. So the people who can access the bank account are Asad, Charlie, Elroy, and Frank.
David does not get access because he is neither you, nor your descendent, nor is he living in House. That he is a child of your housemate is irrelevant; he doesn’t get access to your BankAccount.
Greg does not get access to your bank account either. He is not your descendent. He does not live in House. The fact that he is living with your descendent does not grant him the same rights as your descendent.
Now we come to the crux of the matter. Elroy is not allowed to extend access to your BankAccount to Greg. You own that BankAccount, and you said “myself, my descendents and my housemates”. Your children don’t have the right to extend the accessibility of BankAccount beyond what you initially set up.
When Elroy describes what access he has to BankAccount, he is only allowed to say “I grant access to this to myself and my descendents”, because that is what you already allowed. He cannot say “I grant access to BankAccount to myself, my descendents and to the other residents of Condo”.
Just to be clear:
- I and my descendents get access = protected access
- I and my housemates get access = internal access
- I and my descendents and my housemates get access = protected internal access
- Control = Asad
- CreateChildControls = BankAccount
- House = System.Web.DLL
- Charlie = any type in System.Web.DLL
- David = derived type of Charlie in assembly Apartment.DLL
- Elroy = someClass
- Condo = your assembly containing SomeClass
- Greg = some other class in Condo.DLL
- Frank = derived type of someClass in Yurt.DLL
- Yurt = some other assembly