1

As you may know, when we have this code in Javascript :

function getName()
{
  var getName = "Hello";
  return getName;
}

var NameString = getName;

alert(NameString.toString());

will return ;

function getName()
{
  var getName = "Hello";
  return getName;
}

as string rather than the result of the function invocation.

How can I do the same thing in C# ?

For example how to get the function codes assigned to a Delegate ?

Thanks in advance.

(P.s : I think it seems I may need to use System.Reflection)

The inner me thinks something like this :

public string delegate PointThat();

public string TheMethod()
{
  string getName = "Hello World";
  return getName;
}

// some function signature
{
  PointThat t = TheMethod;
  t.ToString() // returns the function string rather than invocation result   
}

2 Answers 2

1

Javascript is interpreted, C# is compiled. In interpreted languages you deploy the source while you deploy the compiled binary for compiled languages. There is no source anymore. You could parse the method via reflection and rebuild the source, but that is not the same.

Edit:

If you compile your C# files you get an exe or dll or whatever. That is binary executable code and no source code. Javascript on the other hand is always just text, the source code. If you embed JS into a webpage, the code can still be read. Try reading an exe or a dll with a text editor. You can't do that. Its binary, the source code is gone. Thats why you cannot print out the source of your method.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Interpreter_%28computing%29
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Compiler

Also a delegate is basically a (typesafe) function pointer. That means it points to the function and does not contain it.

If you really want to understand the problem you need to understand the difference between a compiler and an interpreter (see the two links above).

5
  • Hi, thanks for the answer but it looks little bit hard to comprehend. Could you please use a more decent language.
    – Tarik
    Oct 29, 2009 at 17:53
  • How does .NET Reflector do it? Oct 29, 2009 at 18:12
  • Reflector uses reflection, as the name suggests, to anaylze the code. It can then rebuild the source. The original source might have been VB or F# or whatever. Oct 29, 2009 at 19:22
  • And the code that Reflector gives you back may not be the same code that went in. For example, I don't think it handles lamdas correctly. Oct 29, 2009 at 21:28
  • @Chris Correct! Some language constructs might also yield equal IL code. The reflection mechanism will the choose one of them... Oct 30, 2009 at 12:36
1

In short, you can't (really).

That's because what you're seeing in javascript is actually an object, not just a function, while the C# code yields a (compiled) function which can be called.

Some of the options you have:

  • Get the function's metadata via reflection; this does not expose any of the functionality which is inside the function.

  • Go a step further and decompile the function (like Reflector does), still this doesn't yield the original source but a repro of it which should do the same thing.

  • Keep the source and compile it "on demand", but that requires also quite some interaction on your part.

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