Member '<membername1>' implicitly declares '<implicitmembername>', which conflicts with a member in the base class '<baseclassname>'
Member '<membername1>' implicitly declares '<implicitmembername>', which conflicts with a member in the base class '<baseclassname>', and so the member should not be declared 'Overloads'
A property in a derived class generates an implicit member with the same name as a member of the base class and specifies the Overloads keyword.
Overloading is used to define multiple versions of a property or procedure all in the same class. You cannot define an additional version of a base class member unless that base class member already specifies Overloads. Because the conflicting base class member does not specify Overloads, the compiler assumes that this property Shadows the implicit base class member.
The Visual Basic compiler creates implicit members corresponding to certain programming elements you declare. The following table summarizes these implicit, or synthetic, members.
Declared element |
Implicitly created members |
---|---|
Enumeration |
value__ member |
Event |
add_<eventname> procedure remove_<eventname> procedure <eventname>Event field <eventname>EventHandler delegate |
Property |
get_<propertyname> procedure set_<propertyname> procedure |
My.Form member, My.WebService member, or member of a class marked with the MyGroupCollectionAttribute attribute |
m_<variablename>Static variable <variablename> property get_<variablename> procedure set_<variablename> procedure |
WithEvents variable |
_<variablename> variable <variablename> property get_<variablename> procedure set_<variablename> procedure |
Because of the risk of name conflicts, you should avoid naming any declared programming element using the same form as any one of these implicit members. For example, you should avoid any element name that starts with get_ or set_.
By default, this message is a warning. For more information about hiding warnings or treating warnings as errors, see Configuring Warnings in Visual Basic.
Error ID: BC40022
To correct this error
If you intend to hide, or shadow, the base class member, replace the Overloads keyword with the Shadows keyword in the declaration of the property.
If you do not intend to shadow the base class member, change the name of the property to avoid the name conflicts described in the previous table.