Tell me more ×
Facebook - Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for facebook developers. It's 100% free, no registration required.
Facebook and Stack Exchange are now working together to support the Facebook developer community. Facebook engineers participate here along with the best Facebook developers in the world. If you have a technical question about Facebook, this is the best place to ask.

This is a simple example of two extension methods overloads

public static class Extended 
{
    public static IEnumerable<int> Even(this List<int> numbers)
    {
        return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0);
    }

    public static IEnumerable<int> Even(this List<int> numbers, Predicate<int> predicate)
    {
        return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num));
    }
}

I'd like to be able to merge them into one, by setting a delegate to be optional:

public static class Extended 
{
    public static IEnumerable<int> Even(this List<int> numbers, Predicate<in> predicate = alwaysTrue)
    {
        return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num));
    }

    public static bool alwaysTrue(int a) { return true; }
}

However, compiler throws an error:

Default parameter value for 'predicate' must be a compile-time constant

I don't see how my alwaysTrue function is not constant, but hey, compiler knows better :)

Is there any way to make the delegate parameter optional?

share|improve this question
Very interesting question +1 – Robert Koritnik Jun 28 '11 at 9:05

4 Answers

up vote 8 down vote accepted

It's not constant because you've created a delegate from a method group... that's not a compile-time constant as far as the C# language is concerned.

If you don't mind abusing the meaning of null slightly you could use:

private static readonly Predicate<int> AlwaysTrue = ignored => true;

public static List<int> Even(this List<int> numbers,
                             Predicate<int> predicate = null)
{
    predicate = predicate ?? AlwaysTrue;
    return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num));
}

(You could still make AlwaysTrue a method and use a method group conversion, but the above approach is very slightly more efficient by creating the delegate instance just once.)

share|improve this answer
Sometimes I wish there would be multiple accepts on SO. All the answers are correct, however Jon's answer seems most profitable for me cause he made me go and read about method groups to actually learn something I didn't know. – Kornelije Petak Jun 28 '11 at 9:09

What you have to do is allow it to be null, and then treat that as always true.

You have two options for this, double the code to leave out the delegate call, this will perform faster in the cases where you don't pass the delegate.

public static List<int> Even(this List<int> numbers, Predicate<int> predicate = null)
{
    if (predicate == null)
        return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0).ToList();
    else
        return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num)).ToList();
}

Or, provide a dummy implementation as you wanted:

public static List<int> Even(this List<int> numbers, Predicate<int> predicate = null)
{
    predicate = predicate ?? new Predicate<int>(alwaysTrue);
    return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num)).ToList();
}

Also, consider whether you really want to do this. The effect optional parameters have on compiled code is that the calling code now provides the default value, which means it will always call the overload which take a list and a delegate.

If you later on want to go back, you need to ensure all code that calls the method is recompiled, since it won't magically start using the method that doesn't provide a delegate.

In other words, this call:

var even = list.Even();

Will look like it was written like this:

var even = list.Even(null);

If you now change the method to be overloaded yet again, if the above call isn't recompiled, then it will always call the one with a delegate, just providing null for that parameter.

share|improve this answer

You could use a null-default value:

public static class Extended 
{
    public static IEnumerable<int> Even(this IEnumerable<int> numbers, 
                                        Predicate<int> predicate = null)
    {
        if (predicate==null)
        {
            predicate = i=>true;
        }

        return numbers.Where(num => num % 2 == 0 && predicate(num));
    }
}
share|improve this answer
public static List<int> Even(this List<int> numbers, Predicate<in> predicate = null)
{
    return numbers.Where(num=> num % 2 == 0 && (predicate == null || predicate(num)));
}
share|improve this answer
Doh, beaten to it by @Jon! – George Duckett Jun 28 '11 at 8:55

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.