If I create a binary add expression (addExpression) of two int literals like this:
BinaryExpressionSyntax addExpression = SyntaxFactory.BinaryExpression(SyntaxKind.AddExpression,
SyntaxFactory.LiteralExpression
(SyntaxKind.NumericLiteralExpression, SyntaxFactory.Literal(10)),
SyntaxFactory.LiteralExpression
(SyntaxKind.NumericLiteralExpression, SyntaxFactory.Literal(100)));
. . and then a binary multiply expression, where left is addExpression and right is an int literal
BinaryExpressionSyntax multExpression = SyntaxFactory.BinaryExpression(SyntaxKind.MultiplyExpression,
addExpression,
SyntaxFactory.LiteralExpression
(SyntaxKind.NumericLiteralExpression, SyntaxFactory.Literal(5)));
Calling multExpression.ToString()
outputs 10+100*5
. I would expect it to output (10+100)*5
.
Is this correct behavior?
Equivalent
property, but that "parse it back from a string" step was pretty horrible last time I tried.