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I'm pretty darn new to C# and I can't figure out how to express something pretty simple.

I have a 3D array that is private.

I have no problem with the function that exposes the contents to read:

public Terrain Tile(int x, int y, int z) { return ....

but I also want an internal function that provides read/write access with a coordinate transformation.

There seems to be no way to specify a setter.

Looking at Microsoft's site it appears that it wants []'s instead of ()'s but that results in the compiler thinking it's an array definition and of course it barfs all over the place. Googling elsewhere I find plenty of people trying to modify a field of something returning a reference type which of course fails but this array is full of enums, not reference types.

Of course I can write a SetTile(x, y, z, terrain) function but being able to access it as an array is so much more clear & elegant, yet it appears to be impossible.

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Are you saying you'd like to implement an indexer for your class? – Yuriy Faktorovich Sep 3 at 3:09

3 Answers

vote up 4 vote down check

You can define a 'view' class with an indexer which is basically a property with arguments:

private Terrain[,,] rawArray = ...;
private View transformedArray = new View(rawArray);

private class View
{
    private Terrain[,,] array;

    public View(Terrain[,,] array)
    {
        this.array = array;
    }

    public Terrain this[int x, int y, int z]
    {
        get { ... }
        set
        {
            this.array[2*x, 3*z, -y] = value;
        }
    }
}
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Same problem as with silky's answer--I want both the raw view and the transformed view. – Loren Pechtel Sep 3 at 3:16
Hey dtb, can I get an opinion on my class? – Yuriy Faktorovich Sep 3 at 3:54
I do agree that indexers are what I want (why the separate term??) but I'm not following what you are doing here. This provides the transformed array but I don't see how it's also doing the raw one. – Loren Pechtel Sep 3 at 4:06
You'd create a different View typed class for each transform, which is why I wrote a base class which allows you to just insert a lambda function for the transform. But for the raw one you could just simply put an indexer in the same class as the Terrain[,,]. – Yuriy Faktorovich Sep 3 at 4:42
@Loren: That's why I kept the rawArray at the top level, so you can access both the raw array and the View instance. Of course, you can define additional View classes for different transformations or use lambdas. (If this is not what you want, please explain "raw view".) – dtb Sep 3 at 10:22
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vote up 0 vote down

Here's one option:

private Terrain[,,] rawArray = ...;
private View view = new View(rawArray);


private class View
{
    private class TransformedView
    {
        private Terrain[,,] array;
        public TransformedView(Terrain[,,] array) 
        {
            this.array = array;
        }

        public Terrain this[int x, int y, int z]
        {
            get { ... }
            set
            {
                this.array[2*x, 3*z, -y] = value;
            }
        }
    }

    private Terrain[,,] array;
    public readonly TransformedView Transformed;
    public View(Terrain[,,] array)
    {
        this.array = array;
        Transformed = new TransformedView(array);
    }

    public Terrain this[int x, int y, int z]
    {
        get { ... }
        set
        {
            this.array[x, z, y] = value;
        }
    }
}
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vote up -1 vote down

To extend on dtb's answer, I wrote the following transform class:

public class Transform<T, K>
{
    Func<K, T> _getFunc1;
    Func<K, K, T> _getFunc2;
    Func<K, K, K, T> _getFunc3;
    Action<K, T> _setFunc1;
    Action<K, K, T> _setFunc2;
    Action<K, K, K, T> _setFunc3;
    public T this[K k1]
    {
        get 
        {
            if (_getFunc1 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            return _getFunc1(k1);
        }
        set 
        {
            if (_getFunc1 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            _setFunc1(k1, value);
        }
    }

    public T this[K k1, K k2]
    {
        get
        {
            if (_getFunc2 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            return _getFunc2(k1, k2);
        }
        set
        {
            if (_getFunc2 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            _setFunc2(k1, k2, value);
        }
    }

    public T this[K k1, K k2, K k3]
    {
        get
        {
            if (_getFunc3 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            return _getFunc3(k1, k2, k3);
        }
        set
        {
            if (_getFunc3 == null) throw new ArgumentException();
            _setFunc3(k1, k2, k3, value);
        }
    }

    public Transform(Func<K, T> getFunc) { this._getFunc1 = getFunc; }
    public Transform(Func<K, T> getFunc, Action<K, T> setFunc) 
        : this(getFunc)
    {
        this._setFunc1 = setFunc;
    }
    public Transform(Func<K, K, T> getFunc) { this._getFunc2 = getFunc; }
    public Transform(Func<K, K, T> getFunc, Action<K, K, T> setFunc)
        : this(getFunc)
    {
        this._setFunc2 = setFunc;
    }
    public Transform(Func<K, K, K, T> getFunc) { this._getFunc3 = getFunc; }
    public Transform(Func<K, K, K, T> getFunc, Action<K, K, K, T> setFunc)
        : this(getFunc)
    {
        this._setFunc3 = setFunc;
    }
}

Allowing you to create sample classes like the following:

class TransformUser
{
    int[, ,] _array = new int[4, 4, 4];

    public Transform<int, int> Normal;
    public Transform<int, int> Transformed;

    public TransformUser()
    {
        for (int i = 0; i < 4; i++)
            for (int j = 0; j < 4; j++)
                for (int k = 0; k < 4; k++)
                    _array[i, j, k] = i * j * k;

        Normal = new Transform<int, int>((x, y, z) => _array[x, y, z]);
        Transformed = new Transform<int, int>((x, y, z) => _array[x, y / 2, z]);
    }
}

With a use like the following:

TransformUser tu = new TransformUser();
Console.WriteLine(tu.Normal[2, 3, 2]);
Console.WriteLine(tu. Transformed[2, 3, 2]);
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