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We're building a web API that's programmatically generated from a C# class (the class has method "GetFooBar(int a, int b)" and the API has a method GetFooBar taking query params like &a=foo&b=bar.

The classes needs to support optional parameters, which isn't supported in C# the language. What's the best approach?

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10 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

A little late to the party, but I was looking for the answer to this question and ultimately figured out yet another way to do this. Declare the data types for the optional args of your web method to be type XmlNode. If the optional arg is omitted this will be set to null, and if it's present you can get is string value by calling arg.Value, i.e.,

[WebMethod]
public string Foo(string arg1, XmlNode optarg2)
{
    string arg2 = "";
    if (optarg2 != null)
    {
        arg2 = optarg2.Value;
    }
    ... etc
}

What's also decent about this approach is the .NET generated home page for the ws still shows the argument list (though you do lose the handy text entry boxes for testing).

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vote up 3 vote down

Or wait unitil C# 4.0 is released. Optional parameters are supported.

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vote up 1 vote down

Hello Optional World

If you want the runtime to supply a default parameter value, you have to use reflection to make the call. Not as nice as the other suggestions for this question, but compatible with VB.NET.

using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
using System.Reflection;

namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
    class Class1
    {
        public static void sayHelloTo(
            [Optional,
            DefaultParameterValue("world")] string whom)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Hello " + whom);
        }

        [STAThread]
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            MethodInfo mi = typeof(Class1).GetMethod("sayHelloTo");
            mi.Invoke(null, new Object[] { Missing.Value });
        }
    }
}
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vote up 2 vote down

I agree with stephenbayer. But since it is a webservice, it is easier for end-user to use just one form of the webmethod, than using multiple versions of the same method. I think in this situation Nullable Types are perfect for optional parameters.

public void Foo(int a, int b, int? c)
{
  if(c.HasValue)
  {
    // do something with a,b and c
  }
  else
  {
    // do something with a and b only
  }  
}
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vote up 0 vote down

Instead of default parameters, why not just construct a dictionary class from the querystring passed .. an implementation that is almost identical to the way asp.net forms work with querystrings.

i.e. Request.QueryString["a"]

This will decouple the leaf class from the factory / boilerplate code.


You also might want to check out Web Services with ASP.NET. Web services are a web api generated automatically via attributes on C# classes.

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vote up 0 vote down

The typical way this is handled in C# as stephen mentioned is to overload the method. By creating multiple versions of the method with different parameters you effectively create optional parameters. In the forms with fewer parameters you would typically call the form of the method with all of the parameters setting your default values in the call to that method.

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vote up 6 vote down

Another option is to use the params keyword

public void DoSomething(params object[] theObjects)
{
  foreach(object o in theObjects)
  {
    // Something with the Objects…
  }
}

EDIT:

Oh, Called like...

DoSomething(this, that, theOther);
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vote up 3 vote down

You could use method overloading...

GetFooBar()
GetFooBar(int a)
GetFooBar(int a, int b)

It depends on the method signatures, the example I gave is missing the "int b" only method because it would have the same signature as the "int a" method.

You could use Nullable types...

GetFooBar(int? a, int? b)

You could then check, using a.HasValue, to see if a parameter has been set.

Another option would be to use a 'params' parameter.

GetFooBar(params object[] args)

If you wanted to go with named parameters wuold would need to create a type to handle them, although I think there is already something like this for web apps (not really my area of knowledge).

Keith.

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vote up 13 vote down

In C#, I would normally use multiple forms of the method:

void GetFooBar(int a) { int defaultBValue;  GetFooBar(a, defaultBValue); }
void GetFooBar(int a, int b)
{
 // whatever here
}
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1  
Called method overloading... – just in case Oct 14 '08 at 2:12
vote up 4 vote down check

From this site:

http://www.tek-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=1500861&page=1

C# does allow the use of the [Optional] attribute (from VB, though not functional in C#). So you can have a method like this:

using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
public void Foo(int a, int b, [Optional] int c)
{
  ...
}

In our API wrapper, we detect optional parameters (ParameterInfo p.IsOptional) and set a default value. The goal is to mark parameters as optional without resorting to kludges like having "optional" in the parameter name.

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