Friend (Visual Basic)

Specifies that one or more declared programming elements are accessible only from within the assembly that contains their declaration.

Remarks

In many cases, you want programming elements such as classes and structures to be used by the entire assembly, not only by the component that declares them. However, you might not want them to be accessible by code outside the assembly (for example, if the application is proprietary). If you want to limit access to an element in this way, you can declare it by using the Friend modifier.

Code in other classes, structures, and modules that are compiled to the same assembly can access all the Friend elements in that assembly.

Friend access is often the preferred level for an application's programming elements, and Friend is the default access level of an interface, a module, a class, or a structure.

You can use Friend only at the module, interface, or namespace level. Therefore, the declaration context for a Friend element must be a source file, a namespace, an interface, a module, a class, or a structure; it can't be a procedure.

You can use the Friend modifier in conjunction with the Protected (Visual Basic) modifier in the same declaration. This combination confers both Friend access and protected access on the declared elements, so they are accessible from anywhere in the same assembly, from their own class, and from derived classes. You can specify Protected Friend only on members of classes.

For a comparison of Friend and the other access modifiers, see Access Levels in Visual Basic.

Note

You can specify that another assembly is a friend assembly, which allows it to access all types and members that are marked as Friend. For more information, see Friend Assemblies (C# and Visual Basic).

Example

The following class uses the Friend modifier to allow other programming elements within the same assembly to access certain members.

Class CustomerInfo

    Private p_CustomerID As Integer 

    Public ReadOnly Property CustomerID() As Integer 
        Get 
            Return p_CustomerID
        End Get 
    End Property 

    ' Allow friend access to the empty constructor. 
    Friend Sub New()

    End Sub 

    ' Require that a customer identifier be specified for the public constructor. 
    Public Sub New(ByVal customerID As Integer)
        p_CustomerID = customerID
    End Sub 

    ' Allow friend programming elements to set the customer identifier. 
    Friend Sub SetCustomerID(ByVal customerID As Integer)
        p_CustomerID = customerID
    End Sub 
End Class

Usage

You can use the Friend modifier in these contexts:

Class Statement

Const Statement

Declare Statement

Delegate Statement

Dim Statement

Enum Statement

Event Statement

Function Statement

Interface Statement

Module Statement

Property Statement

Structure Statement

Sub Statement

See Also

Reference

Public (Visual Basic)

Protected (Visual Basic)

Private (Visual Basic)

InternalsVisibleToAttribute

Concepts

Access Levels in Visual Basic

Procedures in Visual Basic

Other Resources

Structures (Visual Basic)

Objects and Classes in Visual Basic