When you subscribe to an event in .NET, the subscription is added to a multicast delegate. When the event is fired, the delegates are called in the order they were subscribed.<
One option would be to handle this when you raise the event. You can get the event subscribers via Delegate.GetInvocationList, and just call each delegate in reverse order yourself.
Controlling When and If a Delegate Fires Within a Multicast Delegate
The following method creates a multicast delegate called allInstances and then uses GetInvocationList to allow each delegate to be fired individually, in reverse order:
public static void InvokeInReverse()
{
MyDelegate myDelegateInstance1 = new MyDelegate(TestInvoke.Method1);
MyDelegate myDelegateInstance2 = new MyDelegate(TestInvoke.Method2);
MyDelegate myDelegateInstance3 = new MyDelegate(TestInvoke.Method3);
MyDelegate allInstances =
myDelegateInstance1 +
myDelegateInstance2 +
myDelegateInstance3;
Console.WriteLine("Fire delegates in reverse");
Delegate[] delegateList = allInstances.GetInvocationList();
for (int counter = delegateList.Length - 1; counter >= 0; counter--)
{
((MyDelegate)delegateList[counter])();
}
}
You don't need any magic; you just need to reverse the addition.
Writing delegate1 + delegate2
returns a new delegate containing the method(s) in delegate1
followed by the methods in delegate2
.
For example:
private EventHandler myReversedEventField;
public event EventHandler MyReversedEvent
{
add { myReversedEventField = value + myReversedEventField; }
remove { myReversedEventField -= value; }
}
You don't need any magic in the remove
handler, unless you want to remove the last occurrence of that handler instead of the first. (In case the same handler was added twice)