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6

Is there anything built into the core C# libraries that can give me an immutable Dictionary?

Something along the lines of Java's:

Collections.unmodifiableMap(myMap);

And just to clarify, I am not looking to stop the keys / values themselves from being changed, just the structure of the Dictionary. I want something that fails fast and loud if any of IDictionary's mutator methods are called (Add, Remove, Clear).

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9 Answers

vote up 19 vote down check

No, but a wrapper is rather trivial:

public class ReadOnlyDictionary<TKey, TValue> : IDictionary<TKey, TValue>
{
    IDictionary<TKey, TValue> _dict;

    public ReadOnlyDictionary(IDictionary<TKey, TValue> backingDict)
    {
        _dict = backingDict;
    }

    public void Add(TKey key, TValue value)
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }

    public bool ContainsKey(TKey key)
    {
        return _dict.ContainsKey(key);
    }

    public ICollection<TKey> Keys
    {
        get { return _dict.Keys; }
    }

    public bool Remove(TKey key)
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }

    public bool TryGetValue(TKey key, out TValue value)
    {
        return _dict.TryGetValue(key, out value);
    }

    public ICollection<TValue> Values
    {
        get { return _dict.Values; }
    }

    public TValue this[TKey key]
    {
        get { return _dict[key]; }
        set { throw new InvalidOperationException(); }
    }

    public void Add(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }

    public void Clear()
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }

    public bool Contains(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        return _dict.Contains(item);
    }

    public void CopyTo(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>[] array, int arrayIndex)
    {
        _dict.CopyTo(array, arrayIndex);
    }

    public int Count
    {
        get { return _dict.Count; }
    }

    public bool IsReadOnly
    {
        get { return true; }
    }

    public bool Remove(KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue> item)
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException();
    }

    public IEnumerator<KeyValuePair<TKey, TValue>> GetEnumerator()
    {
        return _dict.GetEnumerator();
    }

    System.Collections.IEnumerator 
           System.Collections.IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
    {
        return ((System.Collections.IEnumerable)_dict).GetEnumerator();
    }
}

Obviously, you can change the this[] setter above if you want to allow modifying values.

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A few errors: you need 'new ' in front of all InvalidOperationException(), it should be public bool Contains(TKey item), and CopyTo needs no return. – Sarah Vessels Jul 8 at 19:23
Whoops, instead of changing the parameter type in Contains, change its body to use Contains instead of ContainsKey: return _dict.Contains(item); – Sarah Vessels Jul 8 at 19:24
@Sarah, thank you. – dbkk Jul 8 at 22:01
You did not implement equality check, which is a very important feature for immutable data structures. – Elazar Leibovich Sep 15 at 6:01
vote up 3 vote down

I don't think so. There is a way to create a read-only List and read only Collection, but I don't think there's a built in read only Dictionary. System.ServiceModel has a ReadOnlyDictinoary implementation, but its internal. Probably wouldn't be too hard to copy it though, using Reflector, or to simply create your own from scratch. It basically wraps an Dictionary and throws when a mutator is called.

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vote up 0 vote down

So you want a dictionary where the keys don't change, only the values?

Why can't it be a simple data/record class (i.e. one with just a list of simple properties)?

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Why did this get marked down? I asked for a clarification? – Keith Feb 4 at 22:37
I wasn't the one who marked it down. But I think the one who marked it down, did it because the point is not allowing the values to change, but to lock everything, so no one can change the structure once it is built – Samuel Carrijo May 13 at 11:48
vote up 1 vote down

"Out of the box" there is not a way to do this. You can create one by deriving your own Dictionary class and implementing the restrictions you need.

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vote up 0 vote down

One workaround might be, throw a new list of KeyValuePair from the Dictionary to keep the original unmodified.

var dict = new Dictionary<string, string>();

dict.Add("Hello", "World");
dict.Add("The", "Quick");
dict.Add("Brown", "Fox");

var dictCopy = dict.Select(
    item => new KeyValuePair<string, string>(item.Key, item.Value));

// returns dictCopy;

This way the original dictionary won't get modified.

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vote up 0 vote down

I've found an implementation of an Inmutable (not READONLY) implementation of a AVLTree for C# here.

An AVL tree has logarithmic (not constant) cost on each operation, but stills fast.

http://csharpfeeds.com/post/7512/Immutability_in_Csharp_Part_Nine_Academic_Plus_my_AVL_tree_implementation.aspx

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vote up 0 vote down

Adding onto dbkk's answer, I wanted to be able to use an object initializer when first creating my ReadOnlyDictionary. I made the following modifications:

private readonly int _finalCount;

/// <summary>
/// Takes a count of how many key-value pairs should be allowed.
/// Dictionary can be modified to add up to that many pairs, but no
/// pair can be modified or removed after it is added.  Intended to be
/// used with an object initializer.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="count"></param>
public ReadOnlyDictionary(int count)
{
    _dict = new SortedDictionary<TKey, TValue>();
    _finalCount = count;
}

/// <summary>
/// To allow object initializers, this will allow the dictionary to be
/// added onto up to a certain number, specifically the count set in
/// one of the constructors.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="key"></param>
/// <param name="value"></param>
public void Add(TKey key, TValue value)
{
    if (_dict.Keys.Count < _finalCount)
    {
        _dict.Add(key, value);
    }
    else
    {
        throw new InvalidOperationException(
            "Cannot add pair <" + key + ", " + value + "> because " +
            "maximum final count " + _finalCount + " has been reached"
        );
    }
}

Now I can use the class like so:

ReadOnlyDictionary<string, string> Fields =
    new ReadOnlyDictionary<string, string>(2)
        {
            {"hey", "now"},
            {"you", "there"}
        };
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vote up 0 vote down

Since Linq, there is a generic interface ILookup. Read more in MSDN.

Therefore, To simply get immutable dictionary you may call:

using System.Linq;
// (...)
var dictionary = new Dictionary<string, object>();
// (...)
var read_only = dictionary.ToLookup(kv => kv.Key, kv => kv.Value);
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This isn't the same because a lookup maps keys to a list of values. You can just only put one value in, but you can also just not write to a dictionary if you're going to do without compile-time support anyway. – Daniel Straight Nov 4 at 13:23

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