So I read MSDN and Stack Overflow. I understand what the Action Delegate does in general but it is not clicking no matter how many examples I do. In general, the same goes f
you can call it with a lambda
GetCustomers((cust, ex) => {
//do something here}
);
They confused the hell out of me until I read:
That second book is about java, and doesn't mention delegates, but it explains well a problem delegates help solve: communication between classes.
Refer link for details on DotNet delegates and events: http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cs/Delegate_To_Event_in_CS.aspx
it expects a function that takes IEnumerable and Exception and returns void.
void SendExceptionToCustomers(IEnumerable<Customer> customers, Exception ex) {
foreach(var customer in customers)
customer.SendMessage(ex.Message);
}
GetCustomers(SendExceptionToCustomers);
btw, GetCustomers seems like a terrible name for this function -- it's asking for an action, so its more like DoSomethingToCustomers
EDIT in response to comment
Ok Makes sense, So now why even bother with having a GetCustomer Function? Can't I do that same thing with your function if i Just rename it GetCustomer?
Well, what's happening here is the caller can specify some action. Suppose GetCustomers is implemented like this:
public void GetCustomers(Action<Enumerable<Customer>, Exception> handleError) {
Customer[] customerlist = GetCustomersFromDatabase();
try {
foreach(var c in customerList)
c.ProcessSomething()
} catch (Exception e) {
handleError(customerList, e);
}
}
then you could call Getcustomers from somewhere on a commandline program, and pass it
GetCustomers((list, exception) => {
Console.WriteLine("Encountered error processing the following customers");
foreach(var customer in list) Console.WriteLine(customer.Name);
Console.WriteLine(exception.Message);
});
while you could call GetCustomers from a remote application, for example, and pass it
Getcustomers((list, exception) => {
// code that emails me the exception message and customer list
})
A delegate is a class that points to one or more functions. A delegate instance can be invoked, which will call the function(s) that it points to.
In your case, the GetCustomers
function takes a second function as a parameter.
The second function must take two parameters of type IEnumerable<Customer>
and Exception
.
To call GetCustomers
, you need to make a second function for it to call, then pass it a delegate containing the second function.
For example:
static void GetCustomersCallback(IEnumerable<Customer> customers, Exception ex) {
//Do something...
}
//Elsewhere:
GetCustomers(new Action<IEnumerable<Customer>,Exception>(GetCustomersCallback));
This call creates a new delegate instance that points to the GetCustomersCallback
function, and passes that delegate to the GetCustomers
function. GetCustomers
will presumably call the callback after the customers finish loading, and will pass the loaded customers as a parameter.
You can also leave out the delegate instantiation and pass the function directly:
GetCustomers(GetCustomersCallback);
You would pass it a void method that takes an IEnumerable and an Exception as parameters...
Say you have this method:
public void DoSomeStuffWithCustomers(
IEnumerable<Customer> customers, Exception exception)
{
}
You would call the GetCustomers method like this:
GetCustomers(DoSomeStuffWithCustomers);