'Design By Contract' in C#

对着背影说爱祢 提交于 2019-11-28 03:12:10
Luke Quinane

C# 4.0 Code Contracts

Microsoft has released a library for design by contract in version 4.0 of the .net framework. One of the coolest features of that library is that it also comes with a static analysis tools (similar to FxCop I guess) that leverages the details of the contracts you place on the code.

Here are some Microsoft resources:

Here are some other resources:

Jim Burger

Spec# is a popular microsoft research project that allows for some DBC constructs, like checking post and pre conditions. For example a binary search can be implemented with pre and post conditions along with loop invariants. This example and more:

 public static int BinarySearch(int[]! a, int key)
    requires forall{int i in (0: a.Length), int j in (i: a.Length); a[i] <= a[j]};
    ensures 0 <= result ==> a[result] == key;
    ensures result < 0 ==> forall{int i in (0: a.Length); a[i] != key};
 {
   int low = 0;
   int high = a.Length - 1;

   while (low <= high)
     invariant high+1 <= a.Length;
     invariant forall{int i in (0: low); a[i] != key};
     invariant forall{int i in (high+1: a.Length); a[i] != key};
   {
     int mid = (low + high) / 2;
     int midVal = a[mid];

     if (midVal < key) {
       low = mid + 1;
     } else if (key < midVal) {
       high = mid - 1;
     } else {
       return mid; // key found
     }
   }
   return -(low + 1);  // key not found.
 }

Note that using the Spec# language yields compile time checking for DBC constructs, which to me, is the best way to take advantage of DBC. Often, relying on runtime assertions becomes a headache in production and people generally elect to use exceptions instead.

There are other languages that embrace DBC concepts as first class constructs, namely Eiffel which is also available for the .NET platform.

Aside from using an external library, you have a simple assert in System.Diagnostics:

using System.Diagnostics

Debug.Assert(value != null);
Debug.Assert(value == true);

Not very useful, I know.

ligaoren

There has an answer in .net Fx 4.0:

System.Diagnostics.Contracts

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd264808.aspx

Contract.Requires(newNumber > 0, “Failed contract: negative”);
Contract.Ensures(list.Count == Contract.OldValue(list.Count) + 1);

Looking over the code for Moq I saw that they use a class called 'Guard' that provides static methods for checking pre and post conditions. I thought that was neat and very clear. It expresses what I'd be thinking about when implementing design by contract checks in my code.

e.g.

public void Foo(Bar param)
{
   Guard.ArgumentNotNull(param);
} 

I thought it was a neat way to express design by contract checks.

You can use a Design By Contract implementation from sharp-architecture. Here is the link: http://code.google.com/p/sharp-architecture/

Regards,

Liang

Try LinFu's DesignByContract Library:

http://www.codeproject.com/KB/cs/LinFu_Part5.aspx

You may want to check out nVentive Umbrella:

using System;
using nVentive.Umbrella.Validation;
using nVentive.Umbrella.Extensions;

namespace Namespace
{
    public static class StringValidationExtensionPoint
    {
        public static string Contains(this ValidationExtensionPoint<string> vep, string value)
        {
            if (vep.ExtendedValue.IndexOf(value, StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1)
                throw new ArgumentException(String.Format("Must contain '{0}'.", value));

            return vep.ExtendedValue;
        }
    }

    class Class
    {
        private string _foo;
        public string Foo
        {
            set
            {
                _foo = value.Validation()
                    .NotNull("Foo")
                    .Validation()
                    .Contains("bar");
            }
        }
    }
}

I wish the Validation extensions were builders so you could do _foo = value.Validation().NotNull("Foo").Contains("bar").Value; but it is what it is (fortunately its open source so making it a builder is a trivial change).

And as an alternative solution you could consider domain validation.

Finally the new M languages, as part of Oslo, support restrictions on their extents and fields which translate both to T-SQL validation and a CLR class with functioning validation tests (though Oslo is a long time off from release).

For my current project (february 2010, VS 2008) I've choose http://lightcontracts.codeplex.com/

Simple, it's just runtime validation, without any weird complexity, you don't need to derive from some 'strange' base classes, no AOP, VS integration which won't work on some developer workstations, etc.

Simplicity over complexity.

The most straightforward way, and the way used in the .NET Framework itself, is to do:

public string Foo()
{
    set {
        if (value == null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException("value");
        if (!value.Contains("bar"))
            throw new ArgumentException(@"value should contain ""bar""", "value");

        _foo = value;
    }
}
易学教程内所有资源均来自网络或用户发布的内容,如有违反法律规定的内容欢迎反馈
该文章没有解决你所遇到的问题?点击提问,说说你的问题,让更多的人一起探讨吧!