1

I have a Rectangle property in my class, which I'd like to make accept Width and Height correctly, and also return them, as if I was dealing with a normal Rectangle.

Vector2 position;
Rectangle rectangle;
public Rectangle Rect
    {
        get { return rectangle;  }
        set { rectangle = value; position.X = value.X; position.Y = value.Y; }
    }

Seems fine, works great. Except for when you want to get or set Width or X specifically.

How do I make that possible?

1 Answer 1

2

If the semantics of your class are such that you can be 100% certain that you're never going to care when outsiders adjust Rect, just expose it as a field and callers will be able to set its fields directly. If you cannot make that guarantee, then you might consider offering a method which passes rectangle to a callback method:

delegate void ActionByRef<T1>(ref T1 p1, ref T2 p2);
delegate void ActionByRef<T1,T2>(ref T1 p1, ref T2 p2);
delegate void ActionByRef<T1,T2,T3>(ref T1 p1, ref T2 p2, ref T3 p3);
void ActOnRect(ActionByRef<Rectangle> proc)
  { proc(ref rectangle); position.X = value.X; position.Y = value.Y; }
void ActOnRect<TP1>(ActionByRef<Rectangle,TP1> proc, ref TP1 p1)
  { proc(ref rectangle, ref p1); position.X = value.X; position.Y = value.Y; }
void ActOnRect<TP1,TP2>(ActionByRef<Rectangle,TP1> proc, ref TP1 p1, ref TP2 p2)
  { proc(ref rectangle, ref p1, ref p2); position.X = value.X; position.Y = value.Y; }

That approach will avoid anyone having to make a copy of rectangle just to change one of its members. Probably not worth it with a 16-byte structure, but maybe worthwhile if a larger structure is necessary.

A third approach would be to simply require your callers to do something like:

var r = myThing.Rect;
r.X = 23;
myThing.Rect = r; // Or perhaps myThing.SetRect(R);

The final approach I'd suggest would be to follow the pattern of Control.SetBounds, which includes an overload that takes the Rectangle members as separate parameters, but takes an additional parameter which specifies which parameter or parameters should be copied to the appropriate members of Bounds.

4
  • I guess I'll have to go with Bounds. Thanks! Jan 13, 2013 at 4:49
  • In many cases, that's a good approach. The callback approach has better semantics, but compilers as yet allow no nice syntax. Actually, what I'd really like to see would be support for having Thing.Rect.X be recognized as part of Thing, either by having compilers automatically generate static callbacks with ref parameters (whose internal implementation would be as shown above), or else by allowing property names (including indexers) to include dots [so var r=myThing.Rect would call the property getter for Rect, but myThing.Rect.X = 3 would call a property setter for...
    – supercat
    Jan 13, 2013 at 16:46
  • ... a property of myThing entitled Rect.X [if it exists]. Ambiguity would be resolved by saying that a dotted property name would take precedence unless the expression when binding was legal, so var i=myThing.Rect.X` would call the property getter for Rect.X [if it exists], but var i=(myThing.Rect).X would call the property getter for Rect (which would copy the entire structure) and then access X on that structure.
    – supercat
    Jan 13, 2013 at 16:49
  • I was surprised when I tried putting public int X { get; set; } inside public Rectangle Rect { (here) {get; set;} } and it didn't work. Seems very C#-like, but not implemented yet, unfortunately. Jan 13, 2013 at 19:15

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.