0

I use C# and I want to trigger an event from within a class :

So if the Price property of a class was changed then an event onPriceChanged (outside the class) should be fired. However, I get an error:

The name 'onPriceChanged' does not exist in the current context

How could I fix this? (I guess that I could pass the eventhandler to the class via constructor...but if possible I would prefer not to pass the eventhandler to the class)

Here is my code :

using System;

public delegate void delEventHandler();

class clsItem
{
    //private static event delEventHandler _show;
    private delEventHandler _show;
    private int _price;

    public clsItem()  //Konstruktor
    {
        _show += new delEventHandler(Program.onPriceChanged);  //  error here :  The name 'onPriceChanged' does not exist in the current context
    }

    public int Price
    {
        set
        {
            _price = value;
            _show.Invoke();  //trigger Event when Price was changed
        }
    }
}

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        clsItem myItem = new clsItem();
        myItem.Price = 123;   //this should trigger Event "onPriceChanged"
    }

    //EventHandler 
    public static void onPriceChanged()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Price was changed");
    }
}
3
  • 1
    _show += new delEventHandler(Program.onPriceChanged);
    – user6522773
    Jul 26, 2016 at 12:13
  • onPriceChanged is on a different class (Program).
    – ohadinho
    Jul 26, 2016 at 12:14
  • You are doing the exact opposite of what events are for. The clsItem class should have no clue about who is listening to its event. In other words, clsItem should expose a public event, and you should attach the handler inside the Main method right after you create the new instance.
    – vgru
    Jul 26, 2016 at 12:34

3 Answers 3

2

You're doing this the wrong way round - you're trying to attach the event handler from the class, and clearly that cannot have access to the Program.onPriceChanged method!

You should expose your event, and attach the event handler from the client code (Program).

class clsItem
{
    //private static event delEventHandler _show;
    private delEventHandler _show;
    private int _price;

    public clsItem()  //Konstruktor
    {

    }

    public event delEventHandler Show
    {
        add { _show += value; }
        remove { _show -= value; }
    }

    public int Price
    {
        set
        {
            _price = value;
            _show?.Invoke();  //trigger Event when Price was changed
        }
    }
}

And:

clsItem myItem = new clsItem();
myItem.Show += onPriceChanged;
myItem.Price = 123;   //this now does trigger Event "onPriceChanged" 

Live example: http://rextester.com/WMCQQ40264

2
  • Shouldn't you check if _show is null? Won't that throw a null ref exception if no event handler has been attached? Jul 26, 2016 at 14:44
  • @ChrisDunaway - yep.
    – Jamiec
    Jul 26, 2016 at 14:55
1

The way you're dealing with events is not a good practice. the reason why we use Events is to decouple the objects we create from the methods they need to call.

For example if you want to create another object of the same type(clsItem) and get it to call another method once its price changed, you get into trouble. So I'd suggest this code rather than the current one:

using System;

public delegate void delEventHandler();

class clsItem
{
    public event delEventHandler PriceChanged;
    private int  _price;

    public clsItem()  //Konstruktor
    {

    }

    public int Price
    {
        set { 
              if(value!=_price) // Only trigger if the price is changed
              {
                _price = value;
                if(PriceChanged!=null) // Only run if the event is handled
                {
                    PriceChanged();
                }
              }
            }
    }   
}       

class Program
{   
    static void Main()
    {
       clsItem myItem = new clsItem();
       myItem.PriceChanged += new delEventHandler(onPriceChanged);
       myItem.Price = 123;   //this should trigger Event "PriceChanged" and call the onPriceChanged method
    }

    //EventHandler 
    public static void onPriceChanged()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Price was changed");
    }
}
0

Here is the more traditional way of doing what you want:

public delegate void delEventHandler();

class clsItem
{
    public event delEventHandler Show;
    private int _price;

    public clsItem()  //Konstruktor
    {
    }

    public int Price
    {
        set
        {
            _price = value;
            Show?.Invoke();  //trigger Event when Price was changed
        }
    }
}

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        clsItem myItem = new clsItem();
        myItem.Show += onPriceChanged;
        myItem.Price = 123;   //this should trigger Event "onPriceChanged"
    }

    //EventHandler 
    public static void onPriceChanged()
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Price was changed");
    }
}

Notice that clsItem no longer knows who is subscribing to its event. All it cares about is notifying any listeners who happens to be subscribed. There is no longer a dependency between clsItem and the onPriceChanged method.

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