Subtitle: Can EventHandlerList key's Type be something else than object?
I wanted to use an enum store the keys I would like to have in an EventHandler.
public enum EventKey
{
OnBark, OnCry
}
public EventHandlerList EventList = new EventHandlerList();
public event ComplaintEventHandler OnBark
{
add
{
EventList.AddHandler(EventKey.OnBark, value);
}
remove
{
EventList.RemoveHandler(EventKey.OnBark, value);
}
}
var handler = EventList[eventKey] as ComplaintEventHandler;
>
handler = null
As it turns out it does not work. But it works if I use keys declared like (as shown on):
static object EventKeyOnTap = new object();
After reading some mscorlib's code I see that the problem comes from next.key == key
in
private EventHandlerList.ListEntry Find(object key)
{
EventHandlerList.ListEntry next = this.head;
while (next != null && next.key != key)
{
next = next.next;
}
return next;
}
Both compared keys are from my Enum
, but they are not equal!
I guess it comes from some implicit casts to object
happening (the key stored in the list is of type object
) but am not fluent enough with such low-level concepts.
Is my guess right?
What is the best way to use an Enum
as a key in an EventHandlerList
?
For now I will create my own EventHandlerList
with Enum
as key Type.
For now I created my own EventHandlerList
with a constructor taking a Func<object, object, bool>
which I then use in place of the equality comparaison aforementioned.