I'm new to Code Contracts - just starting to try to figure it out. I just ran into something that I am not sure how to accomplish:
I have a certain private readonly field which can be publicly "got" via a property:
private readonly string name;
public string Name
{
get
{
return this.name;
}
}
This field should never be null, should never be empty, and should never contain any white space. So I put various "Requires" into the constructor to try to ensure those things:
public Thing(string name)
{
Contract.Requires<ArgumentNullException>(
name != null,
"Name must not be null");
Contract.Requires<ArgumentException>(
name.Length > 0,
"Name must have positive length");
Contract.Requires<ArgumentException>(
!name.Any(x => char.IsWhiteSpace(x)),
"Name must not include whitespace");
this.name = name;
}
Putting in a little code to try to violate these contracts shows that the static checker successfully catches violations of "not null" and "not empty", but it does not catch violations of "contains no whitespace". I guess this is unsurprising? I guess it does certain simple checks at compile time (like "!= null") but other more complicated ones (like the linq check for whitespace) aren't done except perhaps at runtime?
Anyway, I then added some invariants to the class to try to describe these same things:
[ContractInvariantMethod]
private void ContractInvariants()
{
Contract.Invariant(this.name != null);
Contract.Invariant(this.name.Length > 0);
Contract.Invariant(!this.name.Any(x => char.IsWhiteSpace(x)));
}
This resulted in the following warning (at least, with warning level set to high), on my constructor (quoted above):
CodeContracts: invariant unproven: !this.name.Any(x => char.IsWhiteSpace(x))
But the constructor is setting this.name to the value of a local variable that requires that same contract!
Are my Requires and/or my Invariant not doing what I intend them to do? Is there a way to make them do what I intend them to do? Should I even be trying to make them do what I intend them to do in the first place? Am I just fundamentally misunderstanding things here? Like I said, I'm totally new to this. Thanks for any guidance.
Contract.ForAll
may be worth giving a try, but I've had limited success with that myself.