Related
I have a class, EventContainer.cs, which contains an event, say:
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
I have another class, EventRaiser.cs. How do I raise (and not handle) the above said event from this class?
The raised event will in turn call the handler of the event in the EventContainer class. Something like this (this is obviously not correct):
EventContainer obj = new EventContainer();
RaiseEvent(obj.AfterSearch);
This is not possible, Events can only be risen from inside the class. If you could do that, it would defeat the purpose of events (being able to rise status changes from inside the class). I think you are misunderstanding the function of events - an event is defined inside a class and others can subscribe to it by doing
obj.AfterSearch += handler; (where handler is a method according to the signature of AfterSearch). One is able to subscribe to the event from the outside just fine, but it can only be risen from inside the class defining it.
It is POSSIBLE, but using clever hack.
Inspired by http://netpl.blogspot.com/2010/10/is-net-type-safe.html
If you don't believe, try this code.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
namespace Overlapping
{
[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Explicit)]
public class OverlapEvents
{
[FieldOffset(0)]
public Foo Source;
[FieldOffset(0)]
public OtherFoo Target;
}
public class Foo
{
public event EventHandler Clicked;
public override string ToString()
{
return "Hello Foo";
}
public void Click()
{
InvokeClicked(EventArgs.Empty);
}
private void InvokeClicked(EventArgs e)
{
var handler = Clicked;
if (handler != null)
handler(this, e);
}
}
public class OtherFoo
{
public event EventHandler Clicked;
public override string ToString()
{
return "Hello OtherFoo";
}
public void Click2()
{
InvokeClicked(EventArgs.Empty);
}
private void InvokeClicked(EventArgs e)
{
var handler = Clicked;
if (handler != null)
handler(this, e);
}
public void Clean()
{
Clicked = null;
}
}
class Test
{
public static void Test3()
{
var a = new Foo();
a.Clicked += AClicked;
a.Click();
var o = new OverlapEvents { Source = a };
o.Target.Click2();
o.Target.Clean();
o.Target.Click2();
a.Click();
}
static void AClicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine(sender.ToString());
}
}
}
You can write a public method on the class you want the event to fire from and fire the event when it is called. You can then call this method from whatever user of your class.
Of course, this ruins encapsulation and is bad design.
It looks like you're using the Delegate pattern. In this case, the AfterSearch event should be defined on the EventRaiser class, and the EventContainer class should consume the event:
In EventRaiser.cs
public event EventHandler BeforeSearch;
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
public void ExecuteSearch(...)
{
if (this.BeforeSearch != null)
this.BeforeSearch();
// Do search
if (this.AfterSearch != null)
this.AfterSearch();
}
In EventContainer.cs
public EventContainer(...)
{
EventRaiser er = new EventRaiser();
er.AfterSearch += this.OnAfterSearch;
}
public void OnAfterSearch()
{
// Handle AfterSearch event
}
I stumbled across this problem as well, because i was experimenting with calling PropertyChanged events from outside. So you dont have to implement everything in every class. The solution from halorty wouldn't work using interfaces.
I found a solution working using heavy reflection. It is surely slow and is breaking the principle that events should only be called from inside a class. But it is interesting to find a generic solution to this problem....
It works because every event is a list of invocation methods being called.
So we can get the invocation list and call every listener attached to that event by our own.
Here you go....
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var instance = new TestPropertyChanged();
instance.PropertyChanged += PropertyChanged;
instance.RaiseEvent(nameof(INotifyPropertyChanged.PropertyChanged), new PropertyChangedEventArgs("Hi There from anywhere"));
Console.ReadLine();
}
private static void PropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.PropertyName);
}
}
public static class PropertyRaiser
{
private static readonly BindingFlags staticFlags = BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic;
public static void RaiseEvent(this object instance, string eventName, EventArgs e)
{
var type = instance.GetType();
var eventField = type.GetField(eventName, staticFlags);
if (eventField == null)
throw new Exception($"Event with name {eventName} could not be found.");
var multicastDelegate = eventField.GetValue(instance) as MulticastDelegate;
if (multicastDelegate == null)
return;
var invocationList = multicastDelegate.GetInvocationList();
foreach (var invocationMethod in invocationList)
invocationMethod.DynamicInvoke(new[] {instance, e});
}
}
public class TestPropertyChanged : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
}
There is good way to do this. Every event in C# has a delegate that specifies the sign of methods for that event. Define a field in your external class with type of your event delegate. get the the reference of that field in the constructor of external class and save it. In main class of your event, send the reference of event for delegate of external class. Now you can easily call the delegate in your external class.
public delegate void MyEventHandler(object Sender, EventArgs Args);
public class MyMain
{
public event MyEventHandler MyEvent;
...
new MyExternal(this.MyEvent);
...
}
public MyExternal
{
private MyEventHandler MyEvent;
public MyExternal(MyEventHandler MyEvent)
{
this.MyEvent = MyEvent;
}
...
this.MyEvent(..., ...);
...
}
Agree with Femaref -- and note this is an important difference between delegates and events (see for example this blog entry for an good discussion of this and other differences).
Depending on what you want to achieve, you might be better off with a delegate.
Not a good programming but if you want to do that any way you can do something like this
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Extension ext = new Extension();
ext.MyEvent += ext_MyEvent;
ext.Dosomething();
}
static void ext_MyEvent(int num)
{
Console.WriteLine(num);
}
}
public class Extension
{
public delegate void MyEventHandler(int num);
public event MyEventHandler MyEvent;
public void Dosomething()
{
int no = 0;
while(true){
if(MyEvent!=null){
MyEvent(++no);
}
}
}
}
I had a similar confusion and honestly find the answers here to be confusing. Although a couple hinted at solutions that I would later find would work.
My solution was to hit the books and become more familiar with delegates and event handlers.
Although I've used both for many years, I was never intimately familiar with them.
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/20550/C-Event-Implementation-Fundamentals-Best-Practices
gives the best explanation of both delegates and event handlers that I've ever read and clearly explains that a class can be a publisher of events and have other classes consume them.
This article: http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/12285/Implementing-an-event-which-supports-only-a-single discusses how to single-cast events to only one handler since delegates are multicast by definition . A delegate inherits system.MulticastDelegate most including the system delegates are Multicast.
I found that multicast meant that any event handler with the same signature would receive the raised event. Multicast behavior has caused me some sleepless nights as I stepped through code and saw my event seemingly erroneously being sent to handlers that I had no intention of getting this event. Both articles explains this behavior.
The second article shows you one way, and the first article shows you another, by making the delegate and the signature tightly typed.
I personally believe strong typing prevents stupid bugs that can be a pain to find. So I'd vote for the first article, even though I got the second article code working. I was just curious. :-)
I also got curious if I could get #2 articles code to behave like how I interpreted the original question above. Regardless of your chosen approach or if I'm also misinterpreting the original question, my real message is that I still think you would benefit from reading the first article as I did, especially if the questions or answers on this page leave you confused. If you are having multicast nightmares and need a quick solution then article 2 may help you.
I started playing with the second article's eventRaiser class. I made a simple windows form project.
I added the second articles class EventRaiser.cs to my project.
In the Main form's code, I defined a reference to that EventRaiser class at the top as
private EventRaiser eventRaiser = new EventRaiser();
I added a method in the main form code that I wanted to be called when the event was fired
protected void MainResponse( object sender, EventArgs eArgs )
{
MessageBox.Show("got to MainResponse");
}
then in the main form's constructor I added the event assignment:
eventRaiser.OnRaiseEvent += new EventHandler(MainResponse);`
I then created a class that would be instantiated by my main form called "SimpleClass" for lack of creative ingenuity at the moment.
Then I added a button and in the button's click event
I instantiated the SimpleClass code I wanted to raise an event from:
private void button1_Click( object sender, EventArgs e )
{
SimpleClass sc = new SimpleClass(eventRaiser);
}
Note the instance of "eventRaiser" that I passed to SimpleClass.cs. That was defined and instantiated earlier in the Main form code.
In the SimpleClass:
using System.Windows.Forms;
using SinglecastEvent; // see SingleCastEvent Project for info or http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/12285/Implementing-an-event-which-supports-only-a-single
namespace GenericTest
{
public class SimpleClass
{
private EventRaiser eventRaiser = new EventRaiser();
public SimpleClass( EventRaiser ev )
{
eventRaiser = ev;
simpleMethod();
}
private void simpleMethod()
{
MessageBox.Show("in FileWatcher.simple() about to raise the event");
eventRaiser.RaiseEvent();
}
}
}
The only point to the private method I called SimpleMethod was to verify that a privately scoped method could still raise the event, not that I doubted it, but I like to be positive.
I ran the project and this resulted in raising the event from the "simpleMethod" of the "SimpleClass" up to the main form and going to the expected correct method called MainResponse proving that one class can indeed raise an event that is consumed by a different class.
Yes the event has to be raised from within the class that needs it's change broadcast to other classes that care. Receiving classes can be one class or many many classes depending on how strongly typed you defined them or by making them single cast as in 2nd article.
Hope this helps and not muddy the water. Personally I've got a lot of delegates and events to clean up! Multicast demons begone!
The raising class has to get a fresh copy of the EventHandler.
One possible solution below.
using System;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
class HasEvent
{
public event EventHandler OnEnvent;
EventInvoker myInvoker;
public HasEvent()
{
myInvoker = new EventInvoker(this, () => OnEnvent);
}
public void MyInvokerRaising() {
myInvoker.Raise();
}
}
class EventInvoker
{
private Func<EventHandler> GetEventHandler;
private object sender;
public EventInvoker(object sender, Func<EventHandler> GetEventHandler)
{
this.sender = sender;
this.GetEventHandler = GetEventHandler;
}
public void Raise()
{
if(null != GetEventHandler())
{
GetEventHandler()(sender, new EventArgs());
}
}
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
HasEvent h = new HasEvent();
h.OnEnvent += H_OnEnvent;
h.MyInvokerRaising();
}
private static void H_OnEnvent(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine("FIRED");
}
}
}
Use public EventHandler AfterSearch;
not
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
Use a Delegate (an Action or Func) instead of an event. An event is essentially a delegate that can only be triggered from within the class.
I took a slightly different approach in solving this problem. My solution consisted of a winform front end, a main Class Library (DLL) and within that dll, a secondary working class:
WinForm
|------> PickGen Library
|---------> Allocations class
What I decided to do is to create events in the main dll (PickGen) that the Allocations class could call, then those event methods would called the events within the UI.
So, allocations raises an event in PickGen which takes the parameter values and raises the event in the form. From a code standpoint, this is in the lowest class:
public delegate void AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public delegate void AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public class AllocationService { ...
public event AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog RaiseAllocLog;
public event AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog RaiseAllocErrorLog;
then later in the subclass code:
RaiseAllocErrorLog(SOHNUM_0, ShipmentGenerated + ": Allocated line QTY was: " + allocatedline.QTY_0 + ", Delivered was: " + QTY_0 + ". Problem batch.", false);
In the main DLL Class library I have these two event methods:
private void PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool updateDB)
{
RaiseLog(orderNumber, message, false);
}
private void PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool updateDB)
{
RaiseErrorLog(orderNumber, message, false);
}
and I make the connection here when I create the allocation object:
AllocationService allsvc = new AllocationService(PickResult);
allsvc.RaiseAllocLog += new AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog(PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocLog);
allsvc.RaiseAllocErrorLog += new AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog(PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocErrorLog);
and I also then have delegates that are set up to tie the main class with the winform code:
public delegate void JPPAPickGenLibrary_RaiseLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public delegate void JPPAPickGenLibrary_RaiseErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
It may not be the most elegant way to do it, but in the end, it does work and without being too obscure.
A nested class with an instance of the outer class provided in the constructor can access even private members of the outer class. As explained more here: stackoverflow question on inner classes.
This includes the ability to raise events in the outer class. This EventRaisers class could be internal, or otherwise controlled somehow, because it could technically otherwise be created by any script with a reference to the outer class instance.
Very simple example. i like to do it this way using EventHandler.
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
MyExtension ext = new MyExtension();
ext.MyEvent += ext_MyEvent;
ext.Dosomething();
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ext_MyEvent(object sender, int num)
{
Console.WriteLine("Event fired.... "+num);
}
}
public class MyExtension
{
public event EventHandler<int> MyEvent;
public void Dosomething()
{
int no = 1;
if (MyEvent != null)
MyEvent(this, ++no);
}
}
}
I was wondering what the exact use of events is in c#. I am still in the process of learning c# so I maybe missing something but is it possible to just use delegates.
In this example I wrote a class with a method that counts from 0 to 2^64 and every time it reaches a multiple of a thousand raises an event. Here is the code:
namespace EventDelegate
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
EventRaiserClass _eventraiser = new EventRaiserClass();
_eventraiser.handler = SomeEventHandler;
_eventraiser.handler += AnotherEventHandler;
_eventraiser.Loop();
Console.Read();
}
static void SomeEventHandler(object sender, EventArgs args)
{
Console.WriteLine("Event raised");
}
static void AnotherEventHandler(object sendr, EventArgs args)
{
Console.WriteLine("Event raised (Another handler)");
}
}
public delegate void Handler(object sender, EventArgs args);
class EventRaiserClass
{
public Handler handler;
public void Loop()
{
for (long i = 0; i < Int64.MaxValue; i++)
{
if ((i % 1000) == 0)
{
EventArgs args = new EventArgs();
RaiseEvent(args);
System.Threading.Thread.Sleep(1000);
}
}
}
private void RaiseEvent(EventArgs args)
{
if (handler != null)
handler(this, args);
}
}
}
What would the difference have been if I had declared the handler delegate variable to be an event like this public event Handler handler.
Sorry if I am been a bit vague or missing something obvious, but I am just wondering if something else happens behind the scenes when using event rather just using delegates or if it's just for readability purposes.
Events and delegates are similar, but events are more restricted, for good reasons.
In your code, you could do all kinds of things with _eventraiser.handler from the outside. You aren't supposed to do most of those things though.
Consider this line:
_eventraiser.handler = SomeEventHandler;
If you use delegates, you would have to check every time you try to attach an event handler if the delegate is null, and then initialize it with =, and if it is not null, you just have to add handlers with +=. If you forget an initialization, you get a null reference exception, if you put in one too many, you will overwrite all the previous things.
If you use events instead of delegates in this example, you don't have to do any of this, and, in fact, you can't even do it. With delegates you could even take it and then pass it around to some other classes, which could potentially be very dangerous.
The same goes for Invoke, and all the other things you can do with a delegate: They aren't there for events. The only things you can do with an event from an outside class is += and -=, that's it. You can view them as delegates with a special public interface with complicated getters and setters.
(Events also have a special add and remove syntax, but that's a rather uncommonly used feature)
I am kind of tired of having all this useless noise in my code:
private void RaiseSomeOtherEventIfItIsNotNull()
{
if (this.SomeOtherEvent != null)
{
this.SomeOtherEvent(this, EventArgs.Empty);
}
}
In 99.9% of the cases I don't care if someone attached to it or if it is null or not. Just raise the event! I really don't get it why the c# compiler makes me write all this noise.
So I though I could maybe declare an event like this:
public event EventHandler SomeOtherEvent = delegate { };
this would allow me to get rid of the useless null check and the useless Raise* Method. I could just always do:
this.SomeOtherEvent(this, EventArgs.Empty);
Now when I compare the standard approach with "my" approach in Lutz Röder's Reflector I see some signigicant differences. The compiler has overriden Add{} and Remove{}there is an extra static instance of the anonymous delegate:
[CompilerGenerated]
private static EventHandler CS$<>9__CachedAnonymousMethodDelegate1;
and there is this:
.method private hidebysig static void <.ctor>b__0(object, class [mscorlib]System.EventArgs) cil managed
{
.custom instance void [mscorlib]System.Runtime.CompilerServices.CompilerGeneratedAttribute::.ctor()
.maxstack 8
L_0000: nop
L_0001: ret
}
Now my question: Do you seen any issues or disadvantages in decalring events with a default initialization like this?
You've shown an extra method, but not the extra class. The extra method is fine, IMO - that's just representing the no-op handler. Not a problem.
An extra class is somewhat surprising, as is the idea that it's changing the add/remove behaviour... the compiler would always be creating add/remove methods for the event, as that's what makes it an event.
Personally I think this is fine - but an alternative would be to write extension methods, e.g.
public static void Raise<T>(this EventHandler<T> handler, object sender, T args)
where T : EventArgs
{
if (handler != null)
{
handler(sender, args);
}
}
public static void Raise(this EventHandler handler, object sender,
EventArgs args)
{
if (handler != null)
{
handler(sender, args);
}
}
then just call
myEvent.Raise(this, args);
That will work for all EventHandler and EventHandler<T> events.
The convention used by microsoft is this :
Declare the event like this.
public event EventHandler<ChangedArgs> ItemChanged;
Then create a calling method
protected virtual void OnItemChanged(ChangedArgs args)
{
var handler = ItemChanged;
if (handler != null)
handler(this, args);
}
This also is ThreadSafe and whenever to raise the event, simply call OnItemChanged
As far as I can tell, no, since these are no-op handlers (since the IL generates a nop and a ret instruction). Assigning an empty handler is pretty much the same as having none at all, i.e. you do nothing about that event.
I could be completely wrong (and if so, do tell me why, I'm curious too now), but maybe you need to declare the event delegate at class level?
public delegate void SomeEvent(object sender, EventArgs e);
?
I have a class, EventContainer.cs, which contains an event, say:
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
I have another class, EventRaiser.cs. How do I raise (and not handle) the above said event from this class?
The raised event will in turn call the handler of the event in the EventContainer class. Something like this (this is obviously not correct):
EventContainer obj = new EventContainer();
RaiseEvent(obj.AfterSearch);
This is not possible, Events can only be risen from inside the class. If you could do that, it would defeat the purpose of events (being able to rise status changes from inside the class). I think you are misunderstanding the function of events - an event is defined inside a class and others can subscribe to it by doing
obj.AfterSearch += handler; (where handler is a method according to the signature of AfterSearch). One is able to subscribe to the event from the outside just fine, but it can only be risen from inside the class defining it.
It is POSSIBLE, but using clever hack.
Inspired by http://netpl.blogspot.com/2010/10/is-net-type-safe.html
If you don't believe, try this code.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
namespace Overlapping
{
[StructLayout(LayoutKind.Explicit)]
public class OverlapEvents
{
[FieldOffset(0)]
public Foo Source;
[FieldOffset(0)]
public OtherFoo Target;
}
public class Foo
{
public event EventHandler Clicked;
public override string ToString()
{
return "Hello Foo";
}
public void Click()
{
InvokeClicked(EventArgs.Empty);
}
private void InvokeClicked(EventArgs e)
{
var handler = Clicked;
if (handler != null)
handler(this, e);
}
}
public class OtherFoo
{
public event EventHandler Clicked;
public override string ToString()
{
return "Hello OtherFoo";
}
public void Click2()
{
InvokeClicked(EventArgs.Empty);
}
private void InvokeClicked(EventArgs e)
{
var handler = Clicked;
if (handler != null)
handler(this, e);
}
public void Clean()
{
Clicked = null;
}
}
class Test
{
public static void Test3()
{
var a = new Foo();
a.Clicked += AClicked;
a.Click();
var o = new OverlapEvents { Source = a };
o.Target.Click2();
o.Target.Clean();
o.Target.Click2();
a.Click();
}
static void AClicked(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine(sender.ToString());
}
}
}
You can write a public method on the class you want the event to fire from and fire the event when it is called. You can then call this method from whatever user of your class.
Of course, this ruins encapsulation and is bad design.
It looks like you're using the Delegate pattern. In this case, the AfterSearch event should be defined on the EventRaiser class, and the EventContainer class should consume the event:
In EventRaiser.cs
public event EventHandler BeforeSearch;
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
public void ExecuteSearch(...)
{
if (this.BeforeSearch != null)
this.BeforeSearch();
// Do search
if (this.AfterSearch != null)
this.AfterSearch();
}
In EventContainer.cs
public EventContainer(...)
{
EventRaiser er = new EventRaiser();
er.AfterSearch += this.OnAfterSearch;
}
public void OnAfterSearch()
{
// Handle AfterSearch event
}
I stumbled across this problem as well, because i was experimenting with calling PropertyChanged events from outside. So you dont have to implement everything in every class. The solution from halorty wouldn't work using interfaces.
I found a solution working using heavy reflection. It is surely slow and is breaking the principle that events should only be called from inside a class. But it is interesting to find a generic solution to this problem....
It works because every event is a list of invocation methods being called.
So we can get the invocation list and call every listener attached to that event by our own.
Here you go....
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var instance = new TestPropertyChanged();
instance.PropertyChanged += PropertyChanged;
instance.RaiseEvent(nameof(INotifyPropertyChanged.PropertyChanged), new PropertyChangedEventArgs("Hi There from anywhere"));
Console.ReadLine();
}
private static void PropertyChanged(object sender, PropertyChangedEventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine(e.PropertyName);
}
}
public static class PropertyRaiser
{
private static readonly BindingFlags staticFlags = BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic;
public static void RaiseEvent(this object instance, string eventName, EventArgs e)
{
var type = instance.GetType();
var eventField = type.GetField(eventName, staticFlags);
if (eventField == null)
throw new Exception($"Event with name {eventName} could not be found.");
var multicastDelegate = eventField.GetValue(instance) as MulticastDelegate;
if (multicastDelegate == null)
return;
var invocationList = multicastDelegate.GetInvocationList();
foreach (var invocationMethod in invocationList)
invocationMethod.DynamicInvoke(new[] {instance, e});
}
}
public class TestPropertyChanged : INotifyPropertyChanged
{
public event PropertyChangedEventHandler PropertyChanged;
}
There is good way to do this. Every event in C# has a delegate that specifies the sign of methods for that event. Define a field in your external class with type of your event delegate. get the the reference of that field in the constructor of external class and save it. In main class of your event, send the reference of event for delegate of external class. Now you can easily call the delegate in your external class.
public delegate void MyEventHandler(object Sender, EventArgs Args);
public class MyMain
{
public event MyEventHandler MyEvent;
...
new MyExternal(this.MyEvent);
...
}
public MyExternal
{
private MyEventHandler MyEvent;
public MyExternal(MyEventHandler MyEvent)
{
this.MyEvent = MyEvent;
}
...
this.MyEvent(..., ...);
...
}
Agree with Femaref -- and note this is an important difference between delegates and events (see for example this blog entry for an good discussion of this and other differences).
Depending on what you want to achieve, you might be better off with a delegate.
Not a good programming but if you want to do that any way you can do something like this
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Extension ext = new Extension();
ext.MyEvent += ext_MyEvent;
ext.Dosomething();
}
static void ext_MyEvent(int num)
{
Console.WriteLine(num);
}
}
public class Extension
{
public delegate void MyEventHandler(int num);
public event MyEventHandler MyEvent;
public void Dosomething()
{
int no = 0;
while(true){
if(MyEvent!=null){
MyEvent(++no);
}
}
}
}
I had a similar confusion and honestly find the answers here to be confusing. Although a couple hinted at solutions that I would later find would work.
My solution was to hit the books and become more familiar with delegates and event handlers.
Although I've used both for many years, I was never intimately familiar with them.
http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/20550/C-Event-Implementation-Fundamentals-Best-Practices
gives the best explanation of both delegates and event handlers that I've ever read and clearly explains that a class can be a publisher of events and have other classes consume them.
This article: http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/12285/Implementing-an-event-which-supports-only-a-single discusses how to single-cast events to only one handler since delegates are multicast by definition . A delegate inherits system.MulticastDelegate most including the system delegates are Multicast.
I found that multicast meant that any event handler with the same signature would receive the raised event. Multicast behavior has caused me some sleepless nights as I stepped through code and saw my event seemingly erroneously being sent to handlers that I had no intention of getting this event. Both articles explains this behavior.
The second article shows you one way, and the first article shows you another, by making the delegate and the signature tightly typed.
I personally believe strong typing prevents stupid bugs that can be a pain to find. So I'd vote for the first article, even though I got the second article code working. I was just curious. :-)
I also got curious if I could get #2 articles code to behave like how I interpreted the original question above. Regardless of your chosen approach or if I'm also misinterpreting the original question, my real message is that I still think you would benefit from reading the first article as I did, especially if the questions or answers on this page leave you confused. If you are having multicast nightmares and need a quick solution then article 2 may help you.
I started playing with the second article's eventRaiser class. I made a simple windows form project.
I added the second articles class EventRaiser.cs to my project.
In the Main form's code, I defined a reference to that EventRaiser class at the top as
private EventRaiser eventRaiser = new EventRaiser();
I added a method in the main form code that I wanted to be called when the event was fired
protected void MainResponse( object sender, EventArgs eArgs )
{
MessageBox.Show("got to MainResponse");
}
then in the main form's constructor I added the event assignment:
eventRaiser.OnRaiseEvent += new EventHandler(MainResponse);`
I then created a class that would be instantiated by my main form called "SimpleClass" for lack of creative ingenuity at the moment.
Then I added a button and in the button's click event
I instantiated the SimpleClass code I wanted to raise an event from:
private void button1_Click( object sender, EventArgs e )
{
SimpleClass sc = new SimpleClass(eventRaiser);
}
Note the instance of "eventRaiser" that I passed to SimpleClass.cs. That was defined and instantiated earlier in the Main form code.
In the SimpleClass:
using System.Windows.Forms;
using SinglecastEvent; // see SingleCastEvent Project for info or http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/12285/Implementing-an-event-which-supports-only-a-single
namespace GenericTest
{
public class SimpleClass
{
private EventRaiser eventRaiser = new EventRaiser();
public SimpleClass( EventRaiser ev )
{
eventRaiser = ev;
simpleMethod();
}
private void simpleMethod()
{
MessageBox.Show("in FileWatcher.simple() about to raise the event");
eventRaiser.RaiseEvent();
}
}
}
The only point to the private method I called SimpleMethod was to verify that a privately scoped method could still raise the event, not that I doubted it, but I like to be positive.
I ran the project and this resulted in raising the event from the "simpleMethod" of the "SimpleClass" up to the main form and going to the expected correct method called MainResponse proving that one class can indeed raise an event that is consumed by a different class.
Yes the event has to be raised from within the class that needs it's change broadcast to other classes that care. Receiving classes can be one class or many many classes depending on how strongly typed you defined them or by making them single cast as in 2nd article.
Hope this helps and not muddy the water. Personally I've got a lot of delegates and events to clean up! Multicast demons begone!
The raising class has to get a fresh copy of the EventHandler.
One possible solution below.
using System;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
class HasEvent
{
public event EventHandler OnEnvent;
EventInvoker myInvoker;
public HasEvent()
{
myInvoker = new EventInvoker(this, () => OnEnvent);
}
public void MyInvokerRaising() {
myInvoker.Raise();
}
}
class EventInvoker
{
private Func<EventHandler> GetEventHandler;
private object sender;
public EventInvoker(object sender, Func<EventHandler> GetEventHandler)
{
this.sender = sender;
this.GetEventHandler = GetEventHandler;
}
public void Raise()
{
if(null != GetEventHandler())
{
GetEventHandler()(sender, new EventArgs());
}
}
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
HasEvent h = new HasEvent();
h.OnEnvent += H_OnEnvent;
h.MyInvokerRaising();
}
private static void H_OnEnvent(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
Console.WriteLine("FIRED");
}
}
}
Use public EventHandler AfterSearch;
not
public event EventHandler AfterSearch;
Use a Delegate (an Action or Func) instead of an event. An event is essentially a delegate that can only be triggered from within the class.
I took a slightly different approach in solving this problem. My solution consisted of a winform front end, a main Class Library (DLL) and within that dll, a secondary working class:
WinForm
|------> PickGen Library
|---------> Allocations class
What I decided to do is to create events in the main dll (PickGen) that the Allocations class could call, then those event methods would called the events within the UI.
So, allocations raises an event in PickGen which takes the parameter values and raises the event in the form. From a code standpoint, this is in the lowest class:
public delegate void AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public delegate void AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public class AllocationService { ...
public event AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog RaiseAllocLog;
public event AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog RaiseAllocErrorLog;
then later in the subclass code:
RaiseAllocErrorLog(SOHNUM_0, ShipmentGenerated + ": Allocated line QTY was: " + allocatedline.QTY_0 + ", Delivered was: " + QTY_0 + ". Problem batch.", false);
In the main DLL Class library I have these two event methods:
private void PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool updateDB)
{
RaiseLog(orderNumber, message, false);
}
private void PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool updateDB)
{
RaiseErrorLog(orderNumber, message, false);
}
and I make the connection here when I create the allocation object:
AllocationService allsvc = new AllocationService(PickResult);
allsvc.RaiseAllocLog += new AllocationService_RaiseAllocLog(PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocLog);
allsvc.RaiseAllocErrorLog += new AllocationService_RaiseAllocErrorLog(PickGenLibrary_RaiseAllocErrorLog);
and I also then have delegates that are set up to tie the main class with the winform code:
public delegate void JPPAPickGenLibrary_RaiseLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
public delegate void JPPAPickGenLibrary_RaiseErrorLog(string orderNumber, string message, bool logToDatabase);
It may not be the most elegant way to do it, but in the end, it does work and without being too obscure.
A nested class with an instance of the outer class provided in the constructor can access even private members of the outer class. As explained more here: stackoverflow question on inner classes.
This includes the ability to raise events in the outer class. This EventRaisers class could be internal, or otherwise controlled somehow, because it could technically otherwise be created by any script with a reference to the outer class instance.
Very simple example. i like to do it this way using EventHandler.
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
MyExtension ext = new MyExtension();
ext.MyEvent += ext_MyEvent;
ext.Dosomething();
Console.ReadLine();
}
static void ext_MyEvent(object sender, int num)
{
Console.WriteLine("Event fired.... "+num);
}
}
public class MyExtension
{
public event EventHandler<int> MyEvent;
public void Dosomething()
{
int no = 1;
if (MyEvent != null)
MyEvent(this, ++no);
}
}
}
On the MSDN, I have found following:
public event EventHandler<MyEventArgs> SampleEvent;
public void DemoEvent(string val)
{
// Copy to a temporary variable to be thread-safe.
EventHandler<MyEventArgs> temp = SampleEvent;
Is it reference?
If so I do not understand its meaning as when SampleEvent became null, so does the temp
if (temp != null)
temp(this, new MyEventArgs(val));
}
This is a paranoia thing to do with threading. If another thread unsubscribes the last handler just after you've checked it for null, it could become null and you'll cause an exception. Since delegates are immutable, capturing a snapshot of the delegate into a variable stops this from happening.
Of course, it does have the other side effect that you could (instead) end up raising the event against an object that thinks it already unsubscribed...
But to stress - this is only an issue when multiple threads are subscribing / unsubscribing to the object, which is a: rare, and b: not exactly desirable.
(From what I read in Essential C# 4.0)
Basically, from this C# code:
public class CustomEventArgs: EventArgs {…}
public delegate void CustomEventHandler(object sender, CustomEventArgs a);
public event CustomEventHandler RaiseCustomEvent;
the compiler will generate CIL code (loosely) equivalent to the following C# code:
public delegate void CustomEventHandler(object sender, CustomEventArgs a);
private CustomEventHandler customEventHandler; // <-- generated by the compiler
public void add_CustomEventHandler(CustomEventHandler handler) {
System.Delegate.Combine(customEventHandler, handler);
}
public void remove_CustomEventHandler(CustomEventHandler handler) {
System.Delegate.Remove(customEventHandler, handler);
}
public event CustomEventHandler customEventHandler {
add { add_customEventHandler(value) }
remove { remove_customEventHandler(value) }
}
When you copy the event, you actually copy the private CustomEventHandler customEventHandler. Since delegate is immutable, the copy won't be affected when the original customEventHandler is modified. You can try this code to see what I mean:
string s1 = "old";
string s2 = s1;
s1 = "new"; // s2 is still "old"
Another important characteristic to note about the generated CIL
code is that the CIL equivalent of the event keyword remains in the CIL.
In other words, an event is something that the CIL code recognizes
explicitly; it is not just a C# construct. By keeping an equivalent event
keyword in the CIL code, all languages and editors are able to provide
special functionality because they can recognize the event as a special
class member.
I guess you were confused mainly because you thought event is a sugar-syntax for a class, right?