6

Suppose we have following type:

struct MyNullable<T> where T : struct
{
    T Value;

    public bool HasValue;

    public MyNullable(T value)
    {
        this.Value = value;
        this.HasValue = true;
    }

    public static implicit operator T(MyNullable<T> value)
    {
        return value.HasValue ? value.Value : default(T);
    }
}

And try to compile following code snippet:

MyNullable<int> i1 = new MyNullable<int>(1);
MyNullable<int> i2 = new MyNullable<int>(2);

int i = i1 + i2;

This snipped compiled well and without errors. i1 and i2 casts to integer and addition evaluated.

But if we have following type:

struct Money
{
    double Amount;
    CurrencyCodes Currency; /*enum CurrencyCode { ... } */

    public Money(double amount, CurrencyCodes currency)
    {
        Amount = amount;
        Currency = currency;
    }

    public static Money operator + (Money x, Money y)
    {
        if (x.Currency != y.Currency)
            // Suppose we implemented method ConvertTo
            y = y.ConvertTo(x.Currency); 

        return new Money(x.Amount + y.Amount, x.Currency);
    }
}

Try to compile another code snippet:

MyNullable<Money> m1 = 
   new MyNullable<Money>(new Money(10, CurrenciesCode.USD));
MyNullable<Money> m2 = 
   new MyNullable<Money>(new Money(20, CurrenciesCode.USD));

Money m3 = m1 + m2;

And now the question, why compiler generate "error CS0019: Operator '+' cannot be applied to operands of type 'MyNullable<Money>' and 'MyNullable<Money>'"?

2 Answers 2

10

That is an interesting question... it works with Decimal, for example, but not TimeSpan, which are both proper .NET types (unlike float etc that are primitives) and both have an + operator. Curious!

Of course, you can twist the arm with:

Money m3 = (Money)m1 + (Money)m2;

And it you just use Nullable<T> it'll work for free, of course - plus you get the compiler + runtime (boxing) support. Is there a reason not to use Nullable<T> here?

I'll look at the spec; in the interim, you might think about promoting the operator to the MyNullable<T>; with regular Nullable<T>, the C# compiler provides "lifted" operators for those supported by the type, but you can't do that yourself. The best you can do is offer all the obvious ones and hope the type supports it ;-p To access operators with generics, see here, available for free download here.

Note you'd probably want to apply the appropriate "lifted" checks - i.e.

x + y => (x.HasValue && y.HasValue)
          ? new MyNullable<T>(x.Value + y.Value)
          : new MyNullable<T>();

Update

The different handling looks to relate to 14.7.4 (ECMA 334 v4) "Addition operator", where it is pre-defined for a range of types including decimal (so that was a bad test by me), since by 14.2.4 (same) "Binary operator overload resolution", the pre-defined operators do get special mention. I don't claim to understand it fully, though.

9
  • Unfortunately, Nullable<Money> doesn't work either, it looks to me as the built in primitives get special treatment somehow, although I don't know why. I looked up user-defined implicit conversions in the C# spec but I'm afraid I got lost in the technical mumble there... Hope you find it,strange.. Dec 26, 2008 at 12:08
  • @lassevk - Nullable<Money> works fine - simply that the result of m1 + m2 is Nullable<Money>, not Money Dec 26, 2008 at 12:20
  • The MyNullable is doing things the other way round. The value of a Nullable type is not available implicitly. The MyNullable is attempting to achieve that. Dec 26, 2008 at 12:21
  • i.e. "Money? m3 = m1 + m2;" - compiles and runs, with result 30 as expected Dec 26, 2008 at 12:22
  • @AnthonyWJones - and for good reason - what should the implicit cast return if it doesn't have a value? The explicit cast (.Value) blows up (reasonable). Otherwise, there is GetValueOrDefault(). Dec 26, 2008 at 12:25
9

Marc is on the right lines - it's section 7.2.4 in the C# 3.0 spec - Binary Operator Overload Resolution.

Basically the steps are:

  • We need to resolve the implementation for "X + Y" where X and Y are both MyNullable<Money>.
  • Looking at section 7.2.5 (candidate user-defined operators) we end up with an empty set, as MyNullable<T> doesn't overload +.
  • Back in 7.2.4 the set of candidate operators is the built-in set of binary operators for +, i.e. int+int, decimal+decimal etc.
  • Overload resolution rules in 7.4.3 are then applied. When we're doing MyNullable<int> + MyNullable<int> this works because of the implicit conversions of each argument to int - but when we're doing MyNullable<Money> + MyNullable<Money> it doesn't work because Money + Money isn't in the set of candidate operators.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.