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Calling a function from a string in C#

People also ask

Can you call a function using a string?

There are two methods to call a function from string stored in a variable. The first one is by using the window object method and the second one is by using eval() method. The eval() method is older and it is deprecated.

How can I call a function given its name as a string in C?

Put all the functions you want to select from into a dll, then use dlsym (or GetProcAddress on Windows, or whatever other API your system offers) to get the function pointer by name, and call using that.

How do you pass a string to a function in C?

In C, if you need to amend a string in a called function, pass a pointer to the first char in the string as an argument to the function. If you have allocated storage for the string outside the function, which you cannot exceed within the function, it's probably a good idea to pass in the size.

How can you pass a string to a function?

To pass a one dimensional string to a function as an argument we just write the name of the string array variable. In the following example we have a string array variable message and it is passed to the displayString function.


Yes. You can use reflection. Something like this:

Type thisType = this.GetType();
MethodInfo theMethod = thisType.GetMethod(TheCommandString);
theMethod.Invoke(this, userParameters);

With the above code, the method which is invoked must have access modifier public. If calling a non-public method, one needs to use the BindingFlags parameter, e.g. BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance:

Type thisType = this.GetType();
MethodInfo theMethod = thisType
    .GetMethod(TheCommandString, BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance);
theMethod.Invoke(this, userParameters);

You can invoke methods of a class instance using reflection, doing a dynamic method invocation:

Suppose that you have a method called hello in a the actual instance (this):

string methodName = "hello";

//Get the method information using the method info class
 MethodInfo mi = this.GetType().GetMethod(methodName);

//Invoke the method
// (null- no parameter for the method call
// or you can pass the array of parameters...)
mi.Invoke(this, null);

class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            Type type = typeof(MyReflectionClass);
            MethodInfo method = type.GetMethod("MyMethod");
            MyReflectionClass c = new MyReflectionClass();
            string result = (string)method.Invoke(c, null);
            Console.WriteLine(result);

        }
    }

    public class MyReflectionClass
    {
        public string MyMethod()
        {
            return DateTime.Now.ToString();
        }
    }

This code works in my console .Net application
class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        string method = args[0]; // get name method
        CallMethod(method);
    }
    
    public static void CallMethod(string method)
    {
        try
        {
            Type type = typeof(Program);
            MethodInfo methodInfo = type.GetMethod(method);
            methodInfo.Invoke(method, null);
        }
        catch(Exception ex)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Error: " + ex.Message);
            Console.ReadKey();
        }
    }
    
    public static void Hello()
    {
        string a = "hello world!";
        Console.WriteLine(a);
        Console.ReadKey();
    }
}

A slight tangent -- if you want to parse and evaluate an entire expression string which contains (nested!) functions, consider NCalc (http://ncalc.codeplex.com/ and nuget)

Ex. slightly modified from the project documentation:

// the expression to evaluate, e.g. from user input (like a calculator program, hint hint college students)
var exprStr = "10 + MyFunction(3, 6)";
Expression e = new Expression(exprString);

// tell it how to handle your custom function
e.EvaluateFunction += delegate(string name, FunctionArgs args) {
        if (name == "MyFunction")
            args.Result = (int)args.Parameters[0].Evaluate() + (int)args.Parameters[1].Evaluate();
    };

// confirm it worked
Debug.Assert(19 == e.Evaluate());

And within the EvaluateFunction delegate you would call your existing function.