I find code that uses tuples to be horribly unreadable. I think if something's worth doing, it's worth doing well.
In the case of a Point struct, you need to make it immutable (unlike Microsoft's amateur effort!) and implement value-style comparisons. Something like this:
public struct Point2D: IEquatable<Point2D>
{
public Point2D(int x, int y)
{
_x = x;
_y = y;
}
public int X
{
get { return _x; }
}
public int Y
{
get { return _y; }
}
public bool Equals(Point2D other)
{
return _x == other._x && _y == other._x;
}
public override int GetHashCode()
{
return _x.GetHashCode() ^ _y.GetHashCode();
}
public override bool Equals(object obj)
{
if (!(obj is Point2D))
{
return false;
}
return Equals((Point2D)obj);
}
public static bool operator==(Point2D point1, Point2D point2)
{
return point1.Equals(point2);
}
public static bool operator !=(Point2D point1, Point2D point2)
{
return !point1.Equals(point2);
}
public override string ToString()
{
return string.Format("({0}, {1})", _x, _y);
}
private readonly int _x;
private readonly int _y;
}
Tuple<int, int>
. (Note that this is a class, not a struct! It does not have value semantics.)System.Drawing
, and what exactly happened?out
parameters, but I would instead consider returning a struct. This is usually the right thing to do, as it allows you to easily extend the struct in the future to hold more data members, while usingout
parameters would require you to modify the function's signature.