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as the title says: I need a NDepend rule (CQLinq) for C#/.net code, that fires whenever instances of a given type are compared using == (reference comparison). In other words, I want to force the programmer to use .Equals.

Note that the type in question has no overloaded equality operator.

Is this possible? If so, how? :)

Thanks, cheers, Tim

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1 Answer 1

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With the following code with see that for value type, == translate to the IL instruction: ceq. This kind of usage cannot be detected with NDepend.

     int i = 2;
     int j = 3;
     Debug.Assert(i == j);
     var s1 = "2";
     var s2 = "3";
     Debug.Assert(s1 == s2);

However for reference types we can see that a operator method named op_Equality is called.

 L_001d: call bool [mscorlib]System.String::op_Equality(string, string)

Hence we just need a CQLinq query that first match all method named op_Equality, and then list all callers of these methods. This can look like:

let equalityOps = Methods.WithSimpleName("op_Equality")
from m in Application.Methods.UsingAny(equalityOps)
select new { m, 
             typesWhereEqualityOpCalled = m.MethodsCalled.Intersect(equalityOps).Select(m1 => m1.ParentType) }

This seems to work pretty well :)

enter image description here

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  • Thanks, Patrick, matching the method "op_Equality" works, I found out the same - unfortunately, when I thought about it a bit more, I came to the conclusion I really needed the rule "warn if objects of a given type are compared using ==, but not if compared to null" - and this, I think, is impossible. So I worked around the issue by overloading the equality/inequality operators and handling my type as a value type. Anyway, thanks for the effort! May 27, 2013 at 6:28
  • You are welcome Tim, "but not if compared to null" is indeed something that cannot be matched by NDepend May 27, 2013 at 7:36
  • Patrick, Is there any way to return results like this involving classes that do not explicitly define an operator == implementation?
    – Philip
    Aug 6, 2018 at 1:42
  • No, here the query relies on the op_equality() method called, there is no such method to test with NDepend CQLinq when the operator is not explicitly defined Aug 7, 2018 at 8:15

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