3

Found a piece of code today, that I find a little smelly...

TMyObject.LoadFromFile(const filename: String);
begin
  if fileExists(filename) then
    self := TSomeObjectStreamer.ReadObjectFromFile(filename);
end;

If this code works, it will at least leak some memory, but does it work?
Is OK to assign to self in this manner?

What if the streamed object is of a different subclass then the original self?
What if the streamed object is of a different class with no common ancestor to the original self?

3
  • 1
    possible duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/814567/…
    – gabr
    Apr 6, 2010 at 14:09
  • What do you think "works" means in this context? What must this code do for you to consider it "working"? Apr 6, 2010 at 14:15
  • When I read this code, I guess that the intention is to replace an instance of an object with a new instance streamed from a file. The caller of LoadFromFile( ) would expect that the reference it had to an instance of TMyObject would now point to a new instance instead.
    – Vegar
    Apr 12, 2010 at 7:00

3 Answers 3

6

You can assign to Self, but it's only a local variable and you won't actually change anything outside the scope of that method. So that code is almost certainly not going to do what the original coder apparently thinks it's going to do.

2

Consider that a method is equivalent to a free routine accepting the Object as its 1st parameter named Self:

TMyClass.MyRoutine({args})  <=>  MyRoutine(Self: TMyClass {; args})

With that in mind, you see that you can locally change the content of Self without damaging your original Object.

But you are right it is really smelly and very much prone to error.

I would not accept code like that without a very strong convincing case in a comment...

2
  • Somehow your usage of bold makes my ears ring.
    – dummzeuch
    Apr 6, 2010 at 18:21
  • @dummzeuch, ... so it is a noisy warning for smelly code! ;-)
    – Francesca
    Apr 6, 2010 at 19:05
1

yes, you can use self as a local temporary variable, even if it is useless here. But the streamed object must be the same class as the self (TMyObject) in this case, or the compiler will detect an error, because type are not compatible.

In your example, TSomeObjectStreamer.ReadObjectFromFile() should return a TMyObject or your compielr should warn you (or throw an error)

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