I'm creating a generic interface to work as command pattern:
public interface IGenericComponent<T> where T : IVisitableObject
{
void Update(T msg);
}
Then, I'll have another class that I'll hold a bunch of implementations of this interface (each one with its own type). There I would have a dictionary to put the list of commands to execute like this:
private Dictionary<MessageType, List<IGenericComponent>> _components;
This generates a compilation error because I don't put the type for the IGenericComponent. I have a thread that calls the Update method and a method to subscribe (inserta an component to the dictionary):
public void Subscribe<T>(MessageType messageType, IGenericComponent<T> component) where T : IVisitableObject, new()
{
lock (_monitorDictionary)
{
List<IGenericComponent> subscribedList;
if (_components.TryGetValue(messageType, out subscribedList))
{
subscribedList.Add(component);
IVisitableObject firstUpdate;
if(_messageBuffer.TryGetValue(messageType, out firstUpdate))
component.Update((T)firstUpdate);
}
else
{
subscribedList = new List<IGenericComponent>();
subscribedList.Add(component);
_components[messageType] = subscribedList;
}
}
}
private void ProcessQueue()
{
while (true)
{
IVisitableObject msg;
lock (_monitorQueue)
{
msg = _queue.Dequeue();
}
List<IGenericComponent> components;
lock(_monitorDictionary)
{
components = _components[msg.MsgType];
}
if(components!= null)
{
foreach (IGenericComponent genericComponent in components)
genericComponent.Update(msg);
}
}
}
This code does not compile... I came from Java programming, and in Java I can ommit the parametrized type when I instantiate the type. So... I would like to know if is it possible to do that in C# so it would assume that its the generic type (IVisitableObject). Or if you know a better way to solve this problem... The way I've solved this is not the way I would like to use. I've removed generics from the interface and used the generic type IVisitableObject as the parameter of Update method. Thanks in advance.
Dictionary<int, double>etc. doesn't box the key or the value). – Lucero Jan 10 '12 at 18:41