Lets say I want to add an extension method to class B. Can I get a reference to the instance of class B the extension method is invoked on by using the "this" reference inside my extension method?
2 Answers
Yes and no. A short look at the documentation makes it VERY clear.
Per definition the first parameter of an extension method is the pointer to the object the method was called from / attached to, and it actually is a variable referenced by the this keyword but with it's own name:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb383977.aspx
namespace ExtensionMethods
{
public static class MyExtensions
{
public static int WordCount(this String str)
{
return str.Split(new char[] { ' ', '.', '?' },
StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).Length;
}
}
}
That makes it quite easy that there is a "this" there, named "str". So, you can not use "this" (because that would point to the non-existing instance of the class the extension method is defined on), but you can declare your own replacement variable pointing to the object an extension method is attached to.
No; you have to use the actual name of the argument.
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@Jon: Way to be picky :P but yes, "argument" is not the correct term. I stand corrected. Apr 6, 2011 at 5:33