2

Based on http://alexreg.wordpress.com/2009/05/03/strongly-typed-csv-reader-in-c/, I created a DLL which can read different file types. I also have unit tests that run successfully. I create a struct and use it as the generic type.

Anyway, when I compile, I get a warning on each of the struct fields. For example: field 'FileReader.Tests.CsvReader.Record.Field1' is never assigned to, and will always have its default value 0

I am in fact setting the value with SetValueDirect() and when I run through the tests or debug the code, I can verify that. Why is it giving me that error then, and how can I avoid or fix it?

Here is some basic code to give you an idea. I'm guessing I haven't provided enough, but hopefully someone has a clue.

public abstract class FileReader<TRecord> : IDisposable where TRecord : struct
{
        public TRecord? ReadRecord()
        {
            List<string> fields;
            string rawData;

            this.recordNumber++;
            while (this.ReadRecord(this.fieldTypeInfoList.Length, out fields, out rawData))
            {
                try
                {
                    // Insert the current record number to the beginning of the field list
                    fields.Insert(0, this.recordNumber.ToString(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));

                    // Convert each field to its correct type and set the value
                    TRecord record = new TRecord();
                    FieldTypeInfo fieldTypeInfo;
                    object fieldValue;

                    // Loop through each field
                    for (int i = 0; i < this.fieldTypeInfoList.Length; i++)
                    {
                        fieldTypeInfo = this.fieldTypeInfoList[i];

                        bool allowNull = fieldTypeInfo.AllowNull == null ? this.AllowNull : fieldTypeInfo.AllowNull.Value;
                        if (i >= fields.Count && !allowNull)
                        {
                            // There are no field values for the current field
                            throw new ParseException("Field is missing", this.RecordNumber, fieldTypeInfo, rawData);
                        }
                        else
                        {
                            // Trim the field value
                            bool trimSpaces = fieldTypeInfo.TrimSpaces == null ? this.TrimSpaces : fieldTypeInfo.TrimSpaces.Value;
                            if (trimSpaces)
                            {
                                fields[i] = fields[i].Trim();
                            }

                            if (fields[i].Length == 0 && !allowNull)
                            {
                                throw new ParseException("Field is null", this.RecordNumber, fieldTypeInfo, rawData);
                            }

                            try
                            {
                                fieldValue = fieldTypeInfo.TypeConverter.ConvertFromString(fields[i]);
                            }
                            catch (Exception ex)
                            {
                                throw new ParseException("Could not convert field value", ex, this.RecordNumber, fieldTypeInfo, rawData);
                            }

                            fieldTypeInfo.FieldInfo.SetValueDirect(__makeref(record), fieldValue);
                        }
                    }

                    return record;
                }
                catch (ParseException ex)
                {
                    ParseErrorAction action = (ex.FieldTypeInfo.ParseError == null) ? DefaultParseErrorAction : ex.FieldTypeInfo.ParseError.Value;

                    switch (action)
                    {
                        case ParseErrorAction.SkipRecord:
                            continue;

                        case ParseErrorAction.ThrowException:
                            throw;

                        case ParseErrorAction.RaiseEvent:
                            throw new NotImplementedException("Events are not yet available", ex);

                        default:
                            throw new NotImplementedException("Unknown ParseErrorAction", ex);
                    }
                }
            }

            return null;
        }
}
3
  • It might have been easier to simplify your example... Oct 29, 2009 at 16:38
  • I started doing that, but then it seemed overly simplified. The important part I suppose is: fieldTypeInfo.FieldInfo.SetValueDirect(__makeref(record), fieldValue); Oct 29, 2009 at 16:40
  • The point is: without the simpler example we can't reproduce what you are seeing... so a bit hard to answer with confidence. Oct 29, 2009 at 17:09

4 Answers 4

3

The compiler is never going to be able to spot reflection. By definition, by using reflection you have stepped outside the compiler.

IMO, though, this is a bad use of structs - that looks very much like it should be working on classes...

7
  • What do you mean with "it should be working on classes"? The struct strictly defines the record fields and field attributes. Maybe I should create a Record class with record.AddField("name", typeof(int)) or something similar, but I do like the simplicity and strong typing of this. Oct 29, 2009 at 16:47
  • Anyway, you do bring up a good point about Reflection. I am confused then why I wasn't getting that error earlier... Oct 29, 2009 at 16:50
  • structs aren't generally meant to represent "records". They are meant to represent values - things like "26 GBP" etc. "Records" are classically objects = classes. Don't be misled; oversized structs can introduce inefficiencies. Oct 29, 2009 at 17:04
  • I'm guessing the inefficiencies are due to the fact that structs are value types instead of reference types? Also that Reflection isn't particularly fast? I'll have to think about this some more. Thanks for all the input. Anyway, I found out how to get rid of the warnings. If the struct is declared private or internal, you get the warnings. If it's declared public, no warnings. I'm guessing if it's public the compiler assumes it could me modified externally and it has no way of checking that. Oct 29, 2009 at 17:16
  • Indeed - value types will get copied a lot; leading to both stack bloat and lost updates. Reflection can be sped up - that isn't a huge problem. I think your last assumption is valid. Oct 29, 2009 at 17:37
1

It seems that the compiler is not capable of detecting such "indirect" assignments. It can only detect direct assignments like field=value.

You can anyway disable specific compiler warnings. Assuming that you are using Visual Studio, see here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/edzzzth4.aspx

1
  • I would agree with you except these warnings were not coming up early on. At some point (I wish I knew when!), something I changed "broke" it. I'm going to see if I can somehow narrow that down. Oct 29, 2009 at 16:42
1

If using struct instead of class you should know why you do it.

Some (rare) cases where you should use struct:

  1. P/Invoke (when the native function uses "structs") - this is (imho) one of the the reason why MS added struct to .NET (in order to be compatible with native code)
  2. structs are so called value types. structs should be very small (e.g. struct DateTime, struct GpsCoordinates are reasons using struct instead of classes since struct are "faster" than classes because the GC need not to care about it
  3. If you don't know what to use: use class!!

--hfrmobile

0

I hate when I reinvent the wheel. FileHelpers from http://www.filehelpers.com/ already does this in a very similar way and of course covers more edge cases. They have you define a class with attributes instead of a struct (as Marc suggested). If you set their record definition as non-public, you get the same compiler warnings I was getting.

1
  • Now that I'm using it some more, I must say that their CSV implementation (as seen by the end user) is not as clean or easy to use as mine. Either way, they've done a great job and probably better than I would ever do. Nov 5, 2009 at 20:57

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.