ECMA-334 C# Language Specification16.2: Namespace declarations |
A namespace-declaration
consists of the keyword namespace, followed by a namespace name and body, optionally followed by a semicolon.
qualified-identifier
namespace-body
;
opt identifier
qualified-identifier
.
identifier
{
using-directives
opt namespace-member-declarations
opt }
A namespace-declaration
may occur as a top-level declaration in a compilation-unit
or as a member declaration within another namespace-declaration
. When a namespace-declaration
occurs as a top-level declaration in a compilation-unit
, the namespace becomes a member of the global namespace. When a namespace-declaration
occurs within another namespace-declaration
, the inner namespace becomes a member of the outer namespace. In either case, the name of a namespace must be unique within the containing namespace.
Namespaces are implicitly public and the declaration of a namespace cannot include any access modifiers.
Within a namespace-body
, the optional using-directive
s import the names of other namespaces and types, allowing them to be referenced directly instead of through qualified names. The optional namespace-member-declaration
s contribute members to the declaration space of the namespace. Note that all using-directive
s must appear before any member declarations.
The qualified-identifier
of a namespace-declaration
may be a single identifier or a sequence of identifiers separated by "." tokens. The latter form permits a program to define a nested namespace without lexically nesting several namespace declarations.
is semantically equivalent to
namespace N1.N2
{
class A {}
class B {}
}
end example]
namespace N1
{
namespace N2
{
class A {}
class B {}
}
}
Namespaces are open-ended, and two namespace declarations with the same fully qualified name contribute to the same declaration space (10.3).
the two namespace declarations above contribute to the same declaration space, in this case declaring two classes with the fully qualified names N1.N2.A and N1.N2.B. Because the two declarations contribute to the same declaration space, it would have been an error if each contained a declaration of a member with the same name. end example]
namespace N1.N2
{
class A {}
}
namespace N1.N2
{
class B {}
}