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What would be the best way to write a generic copy constructor function for my c# classes? They all inherit from an abstract base class so I could use reflection to map the properties, but I'm wondering if there's a better way?

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3 Answers

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You can create a shallow copy efficiently with reflection by pre-compiling it, for example with Expression. For example, like so.

For deep copies, serialization is the most reliable approach.

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A copy constructor basically means you have a single parameter, which is the object you're going to copy.

Also, do a deep copy, not a shallow copy.

If you don't know what deep and shallow copies are, then here's the deal:

Suppose you're copying a class that has a single row of integers as field.

A shallow copy would be:

public class Myclass()
{
    private int[] row;
    public MyClass(MyClass class)
    {
        this.row = class.row
    }
}

deep copy is:

public class Myclass()
{
    private int[] row;
    public MyClass(MyClass class)
    {
        for(int i = 0; i<class.row.Length;i++)
        {
            this.row[i] = class.row[i];
        }
    }
}

A deep copy really gets the actuall values and puts them in a new field of the new object, whilst a shallow copy only copies the pointers.

With the shallow copy, if you set:

row[3] = 5;

And then print both rows, both prints will have 5 as value of the 4th number. With a deep copy however, only the first print will have this, since the rows don't have the same pointers.

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vote up 7 vote down

Avoid reflection if you can. Each class should have the responsibility of copying its own properties, and send it further to the base method.

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so just to clarify, it'd be best if you had a custom copy constructor on each class that explicitly mapped the properties? – lomaxx Jan 11 '09 at 23:02
I would. How hard is it to write? Certainly easier to read at a glance than a reflection-based method. – duffymo Jan 11 '09 at 23:07
Yes, I would recommend that approach. – Øyvind Skaar Jan 11 '09 at 23:12
It's not hard to read and it's certainly easy to write, however there are maintenance issues to consider. If you add a new property to the class you need to update the copy constructor and tests which is pretty easy to forget. – lomaxx Jan 11 '09 at 23:51
I would disagree about updating the copy constructor. And depending on what the new property changed I'm not sure that you'd need to do more than just re-run your existing tests. Adding another get/set pair doesn't require new unit tests for each. – duffymo Jan 12 '09 at 0:40
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