.. index:: ! contract;interface, ! interface contract .. _interfaces: ********** Interfaces ********** Interfaces are similar to abstract contracts, but they cannot have any functions implemented. There are further restrictions: - They cannot inherit other contracts or interfaces. - All declared functions must be external. - They cannot declare a constructor. - They cannot declare state variables. Some of these restrictions might be lifted in the future. Interfaces are basically limited to what the Contract ABI can represent, and the conversion between the ABI and an interface should be possible without any information loss. Interfaces are denoted by their own keyword: :: pragma solidity >=0.5.0 <0.7.0; interface Token { enum TokenType { Fungible, NonFungible } struct Coin { string obverse; string reverse; } function transfer(address recipient, uint amount) external; } Contracts can inherit interfaces as they would inherit other contracts. All functions declared in interfaces are implicitly ``virtual``, which means that they can be overridden. This does not automatically mean that an overriding function can be overridden again - this is only possible if the overriding function is marked ``virtual``. Types defined inside interfaces and other contract-like structures can be accessed from other contracts: ``Token.TokenType`` or ``Token.Coin``. .. warning: Interfaces have supported ``enum`` types since :doc:`Solidity version 0.5.0 <050-breaking-changes>`, make sure the pragma version specifies this version as a minimum.