My code looks something like this:
#nullable enable
class MyClass<KEY, ITEM>
{
readonly Dictionary<KEY, ITEM> Map = new Dictionary<KEY, ITEM>();
public void Process(KEY key, ITEM item)
{
if (key != null)
{
Map[key] = item;
}
}
}
#nullable disable
The compiler is not thrilled with this, it gives me the warning
type 'KEY' cannot be used as type parameter 'TKey' in the generic type or method 'Dictionary<TKey, TValue>
which I can certainly understand. The problem is, sending null for the 'key' parameter to Process() is perfectly valid so I can't add the "where KEY: notnull" constraint to the class. (and MyClass needs to accept both classes and structs for the KEY type parameter)
The only thing I can think of is this:
#nullable enable
class MyClass<KEY, ITEM>
{
#nullable disable
readonly Dictionary<KEY, ITEM> Map = new Dictionary<KEY, ITEM>();
#nullable enable
public void Process(KEY key, ITEM item)
{
if (key != null)
{
Map[key] = item;
}
}
}
#nullable disable
Which keeps the compiler happy, but then I don't have all those nice C# 8 null checks. For example, it allows me to write this code:
Map[default] = item;
and the compiler doesn't bat an eye.
How can I tell the compiler that the 'KEY' type parameter to Dictionary<> should disallow nulls, but still allow KEY values to be null in the outer class?
EDIT
I want to use the new C# 8 nullability features so that I catch as many null pointers at compile time as possible (instead of waiting for runtime exceptions).
FURTHER EDIT
The direction I'm headed right now, is to put a thin layer around Dictionary to enforce the null restrictions and use it instead of Dictionary<>
#nullable enable
public class CheckDictionary<KEYTYPE, VALUETYPE>
{
#nullable disable
readonly Dictionary<KEYTYPE, VALUETYPE> Dictionary = new Dictionary<KEYTYPE, VALUETYPE>();
#nullable enable
public VALUETYPE this[[DisallowNull] KEYTYPE key]
{
get { return Dictionary[key]; }
set { Dictionary[key] = value; }
}
public bool Remove([DisallowNull] KEYTYPE key)
{ return Dictionary.Remove(key); }
public bool TryGetValue([DisallowNull] KEYTYPE key, out VALUETYPE value)
{ return Dictionary.TryGetValue(key, out value); }
public List<VALUETYPE> Values => Dictionary.Values.ToList();
}
I think that in your case the next approach can be used:
TKey to be notnull. As a result the compiler will enfoce null checks against TKey.AllowNullAttribute to the parameter TKey key of the method Process. As a result code that passes null key to the method Process will not produce warnings.Here is the code with comments:
class MyClass<TKey, TItem> where TKey : notnull
{
// With "notnull" constraint type parameter "TKey" matches type constraint
// of the class Dictionary<TKey, TValue>, therefore compiler does not
// generate the next warning:
// The type 'TKey' cannot be used as type parameter 'TKey' in the
// generic type or method 'Dictionary<TKey, TValue>'. Nullability
// of type argument 'TKey' doesn't match 'notnull' constraint.
readonly Dictionary<TKey, TItem> Map = new Dictionary<TKey, TItem>();
public void Process([System.Diagnostics.CodeAnalysis.AllowNull] TKey key, TItem item)
{
// "TKey key" is marked with [AllowNull] attribute. Therefore if you delete
// null check "key != null" compiler will produce the next warning on the line
// "Map[key] = item":
// Possible null reference argument for parameter 'key' in
// 'TItem Dictionary<TKey, TItem>.this[TKey key]'.
if (key != null)
Map[key] = item;
// Because "TKey" is constrained to be "notnull", this line of code
// produces the next warning:
// Possible null reference argument for parameter 'key' in
// 'TItem Dictionary<TKey, TItem>.this[TKey key]'.
Map[default] = item;
}
}
static class DemoClass
{
public static void Demo()
{
MyClass<string, int> mc1 = new MyClass<string, int>();
// This line does not produce a warning, because "TKey key" is marked
// with [AllowNull] attribute.
mc1.Process(null, 0);
// This line does not produce a warning too.
mc1.Process(GetNullableKey(), 0);
// Usage of "MyClass" with value type "TKey" is also allowed.
// Compiler does not produce warnings.
MyClass<int, int> mc2 = new MyClass<int, int>();
mc2.Process(0, 1);
}
public static string? GetNullableKey() => null;
}
So using such approach we:
TKey in the MyClass;null key to the Process method without getting warnings.If you love us? You can donate to us via Paypal or buy me a coffee so we can maintain and grow! Thank you!
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