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1

I was writing some code today and something was not working as I expected.

Why does the following code execute even though the condition should have evaluated to false?

alt text

I have tried putting braces around the two conditions, and switching their position, but the EndedUsingApplication even still executes.

EDIT:

It has nothing to do with the || or && operators. Look at this...

alt text

Nobody can learn from my mistake unless I post the culprit code, so here it is.

  public static bool operator ==(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     if ((object)a == null || (object)b == null)
        return false;
     return a.process_name == b.process_name && a.window_title == b.window_title;
     }

  public static bool operator !=(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     return a == b ? false : true;
     }

And here is the working code ...

  public static bool operator ==(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     // Casting to object class prevents this comparison operator being executed
     // again and causing an infinite loop (which I think .NET detects and stops
     // but it would still be a huge hole in the logic.
     if ((object)a == null && (object)b == null)
        return true;
     if ((object)a == null ^ (object)b == null)
        return false;
     return a.process_name == b.process_name && a.window_title == b.window_title;
     }

  public static bool operator !=(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     return a == b ? false : true;
     }

The problem appeared to be when the != operator received two null values.

flag

Can you post that code? – danish Aug 20 at 3:25
@Jay Riggs: Bingo! Yeah it turns out I have. There is some bad logic in there which is returning an incorrect result. Write a proper answer and maybe I'll mark it as the answer ;) – Nippysaurus Aug 20 at 3:26
@Nippy - add as an answer! Thanks! – Jay Riggs Aug 20 at 3:27
2  
:) - this was like playing 20 questions – Daniel Aug 20 at 3:31
I assume you've got some regression unit tests in there too for that :p – Brendan Kowitz Aug 20 at 6:22
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5 Answers

vote up 49 vote down check

Have you overloaded != ?

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See the original question for explanation. – Nippysaurus Aug 20 at 3:30
Wow, great call. – silky Aug 20 at 3:38
i think there's a lesson to be learned here – rik.the.vik Aug 20 at 15:38
1  
yes, the lesson is if anyone tries to overload an operator, you hit them with a fish. – silky Aug 21 at 3:01
Shall we truck in some nice, aged trout from IRC land? – jrista Aug 21 at 3:02
vote up 1 vote down

I think a better approach is to use Object.ReferenceEquals as it is more explicit:

public static bool operator ==(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     // same reference so equals is true - will be true for null == null
     if (object.ReferenceEquals(a, b))
        return true;

     // one is null and the other is not
     if (object.ReferenceEquals(a, null) || object.ReferenceEquals(b, null))
        return false;

     // dealt with all combinations of null - compare fields
     return a.process_name == b.process_name && a.window_title == b.window_title;
     }

  public static bool operator !=(ActiveApplication a, ActiveApplication b)
     {
     return !(a == b);
     }
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vote up 1 vote down

Are you certain that you're actually on the line you have highlighted? You can click around in the call stack window and make any part of the call stack the "current" line in the sense that you can get the value of variables there and so forth.

The point being, perhaps EndedUsingApplication sets ActiveApplication to null, so that ActiveApplication wasn't null when it evaluated the if, but now it's null when you're evaluating it in the debugger.

Have you put a breakpoint on the EndedUsingApplication(ActiveApplication) line to make sure ActiveApplication is null before you execute that line?

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vote up 1 vote down

Is your program multi threaded?

I have seen situations where I check a value and then try using it only to find its changed. Whats happened is that another thread as changed the value after I checked it but before I used it.

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vote up 3 vote down

Not sure why. But are you sure the running application is compiled using the code you are stepping through. I have seen this sort of thing when the code is different to what is actually being executed.

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