3

I have a bit of code that I have been tasked with converting to C# from VB. A snippet of mine seems like it cannot be converted from one to the other, and if so, I just don't know how to do it and am getting a little frustrated.

Here's some background:

OrderForm is an abstract class, inherited by Invoice (and also PurchaseOrder). The following VB snippet works correctly:

Dim Invs As List(Of OrderForm) = GetForms(theOrder.OrderID)
....
Dim inv As Invoice = Invs.Find(
    Function(someInv As Invoice) thePO.SubPONumber = someInv.SubInvoiceNumber)

In C#, the best I came to converting this is:

List<OrderForm> Invs = GetForms(theOrder.OrderID);
....
Invoice inv = Invs.Find(
    (Invoice someInv) => thePO.SubPONumber == someInv.SubInvoiceNumber);

However, I get the following error when I do this:

Cannot convert lambda expression to delegate type 'System.Predicate' because the parameter types do not match the delegate parameter types

Is there any way to fix this without restructuring my whole codebase?

2
  • Almost all C# can be converted to VB.NET and vice versa because it all compiles to MSIL. You just need to find the sweet spot to express the issue. This is just a clarification comment.
    – jcolebrand
    Jan 6, 2011 at 2:35
  • For converting VB to C# - have you considered disassembling the compiled VB function in Redgate .NET Reflector (Free version works fine), and setting the output type to C#? May help for these tricksy types of conversions.
    – user111013
    Jan 6, 2011 at 13:10

5 Answers 5

5

Whenever you convert VB to C#, ALWAYS TURN OPTION STRICT ON. In this case you'll see the error message before you even hit c#. In this case VB will return

Option Strict On does not allow narrowing in implicit type conversions between the lambda expression and delegate 'System.Predicate(Of OrderForm)'

From there you can pretty easily see that you're trying to implicitly cast a base class as a child class. The C# code that people wrote here is correct, here's the VB equivalent:

Dim inv As Invoice = DirectCast(Invs.Find(Function(someInv As OrderForm) SubPONumber = DirectCast(thePO.SubPONumber, Invoice).SubInvoiceNumber), Invoice)

UPDATE

Here's the C# version from @Anthony Pegram's post:

Invoice inv = (Invoice)Invs.Find(someInv => thePO.SubPONumber == ((Invoice)someInv).SubInvoiceNumber);

Also, I recommend that you make some changes to your pattern if possible. GetForms() right now returns OrderForms but later you just assume that they're all Invoices. Hopefully you've got some logic to verify that. I'd recommend that GetForms() actually returns Invoices otherwise.

4
  • +1 Took the liberty of correcting a typo in your answer: you wrote "option explicit" in one place. My recommendation would be "ALWAYS TURN OPTION STRICT ON" even if you're programming VB and not trying to convert to C# !
    – MarkJ
    Jan 6, 2011 at 12:53
  • Thanks @MarkJ, I'm fighting a cold and my brain is a little frozen
    – Chris Haas
    Jan 6, 2011 at 13:51
  • thank you for this, but this does not answer the question. What would the C# code be?
    – Jason
    Jan 6, 2011 at 17:19
  • Sorry, I meant to say that @Anthony Pegram had what should be the correct version. I'll update above.
    – Chris Haas
    Jan 6, 2011 at 17:29
3

Well, Find is expecting a Predicate<OrderForm> but you are trying to give it a Predicate<Invoice>. It is correct that this should not compile. I'm surprised the VB.NET works.

What is thePO?

Additionally, the result of Find is an OrderForm and you are assigning to a variable of type Invoice.

Ideally, you want something like this:

OrderForm orderForm = Invs.Find(o => o.SomeOrderFormProperty == someValue);

If you want to pull invoices, you could do something like this:

Invoice invoice = Invs.OfType<Invoice>()
                      .SingleOrDefault(x => x.SomeInvoiceProperty == someValue);

if(invoice != null) {
    // do something
}

But really, if you are after Invoices, why are you typing the list as List<OrderForm> instead of List<Invoice>?

4
  • I understand what the problem is... just why does it work in VB.NET and not C#, and how can I make it work in C#? Also, I need to compare Invoice s, so I'm not looking to pull an OrderForm
    – Jason
    Jan 6, 2011 at 2:35
  • VB (and BASIC in general) has historically been a "do what I meant, not what I said" type of language. So this might be a case where the compiler is inserting casts for you and changing crap around to make your life easier. Without seeing all of the code though, it's hard to say.
    – cdhowie
    Jan 6, 2011 at 2:40
  • what else would you like to see? i will show you whatever you want to make it more clear to you.
    – Jason
    Jan 6, 2011 at 2:42
  • 1
    @Jason - I mean the OP - mind if I call you "Bruce" to keep it clear? It's working in VB because you have Option Strict Off. It's best practise to always have Option Strict On, then the VB.Net compiler will warn you where casts and conversions are needed. That's what cdhowie is hinting at. See also Chris's answer
    – MarkJ
    Jan 6, 2011 at 12:56
2

I'm guessing that OrderForm derives from Invoice. If so, rewrite your lambda to omit the explicit type declaration inside the Find. (Can't say with certainty for VB, but for C#, the type is not required in a lambda, it will be inferred.)

Invoice inv = Invs.Find(someInv => thePO.SubPONumber == someInv.SubInvoiceNumber); 

Edit

Based on your comment, you're going to have to do some casting inside the lambda and also to the result.

Invoice inv = (Invoice)Invs.Find(someInv => 
                   thePO.SubPONumber == ((Invoice)someInv).SubInvoiceNumber);  

Or you could elect to use LINQ extension methods as opposed to Find in List<>

Invoice inv = Invs.OfType<Invoice>().FirstOrDefault<Invoice>(someInv => someInv.SubInvoiceNumber == thePO.SubPONumber);
3
  • Invoice derives from OrderForm. That kind of works, except that the value being compared (SubInvoiceNumber) is specific to Invoice so the omission of the explicit type doesn't work :(
    – Jason
    Jan 6, 2011 at 2:39
  • This is correct if you update FirstOrDefault() to be FirstOrDefault<Invoice>.
    – Jason
    Jan 6, 2011 at 19:23
  • @Jason, did you really need to use <Invoice> in the FirstOrDefault call? You shouldn't need to, as OfType will result in an IEnumerable<Invoice>, so FirstOrDefault shouldn't need a type argument. It's unexpected if you need to be explicit. Jan 6, 2011 at 19:33
1

Edit:

Actually, you don't need to create a new list

List<OrderForm> Invs = new List<OrderForm> { new Invoice(1), new Invoice(2) };  
List<Invoice> invoices = Invs.OfType<Invoice>().Where(invoice => invoice.val == 1).ToList();
0
0

My guess is that you need to cast your OrderForm to an Invoice:

Invoice inv = (Invoice)Invs.Find(
    someInv => thePO.SubPONumber == ((Invoice)someInv).SubInvoiceNumber); 

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