I\'m writing .NET On-the-Fly compiler for CLR scripting and want execution method make generic acceptable:
object Execute()
{
return type.InvokeMember(..);
You need to add
where T : class
to your method declaration, e.g.
T Execute<T>() where T : class
{
By the way, as a suggestion, that generic wrapper doesn't really add much value. The caller can write:
MyClass c = whatever.Execute() as MyClass;
Or if they want to throw on fail:
MyClass c = (MyClass)whatever.Execute();
The generic wrapper method looks like this:
MyClass c = whatever.Execute<MyClass>();
All three versions have to specify exactly the same three entities, just in different orders, so none are any simpler or any more convenient, and yet the generic version hides what is happening, whereas the "raw" versions each make it clear whether there will be a throw or a null
.
(This may be irrelevant to you if your example is simplified from your actual code).
It seems like you are just adding a wrapper method for casting to the type the user wants, thus only adding overhead to the execution. For the user, writing
int result = Execute<int>();
isn't much different from
int result = (int)Execute();
You can use the out modifier to write the result into a variable in the caller's scope, and return a boolean flag to tell whether it succeeded:
bool Execute<T>(out T result) where T : class
{
result = Execute() as T;
return result != null;
}
This small piece of code is an exception safe substitution for the as-keyword:
return Execute() is T value ? value : default(T)
It uses the pattern matching feature introduced with C# 7. Use it, if you don't want to restrict the generic parameter to a reference type
Is there a chance that Execute() might return a value type? If so, then you need Earwicker's method for class types, and another generic method for value types. Might look like this:
Nullable<T> ExecuteForValueType<T> where T : struct
The logic inside that method would say
object rawResult = Execute();
Then, you'd have to get the type of rawResult and see if it can be assigned to T:
Nullable<T> finalReturnValue = null;
Type theType = rawResult.GetType();
Type tType = typeof(T);
if(tType.IsAssignableFrom(theType))
{
finalReturnValue = tType;
}
return finalReturnValue;
Finally, make your original Execute message figure out which T is has (class or struct type), and call the appropriate implementation.
Note: This is from rough memory. I did this about a year ago and probably don't remember every detail. Still, I hope pointing you in the general direction helps.
You cannot use the as
operator with a generic type with no restriction. Since the as
operator uses null to represent that it was not of the type, you cannot use it on value types. If you want to use obj as T
, T
will have to be a reference type.
T Execute<T>() where T : class
{
return Execute() as T;
}