I wrote my own idea of your requirements, but I am not sure if it suits your needs. INotifyProperty changed is something you could also look into, but I don't really like it because it is like wiring up speghetti. Maybe this will give you some creative ideas, though.
What this does, is allow you to use ObservableObject as for all of your properties types. By doing this, each property will have an ObjectChanged event you can wire-up to. The con(s) are that you must initialize all of your properties in the constructor to prevent a NullReferenceException somewhere in your code.
This example uses three classes.
- ObservableObject.cs
- Employee.cs
- Program.cs
ObservableObject.cs
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// <copyright file="ObservableObject.cs" company="DCOM Productions">
// Copyright (c) DCOM Productions. All rights reserved.
// </copyright>
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
namespace PropertyChangedEventExample {
using System;
public class ObservableObject : Object {
/// <summary>
/// Expose the default constructor
/// </summary>
public ObservableObject() {
// No default implementation
}
private object m_Object = null;
/// <summary>
/// Base object
/// </summary>
public object Object {
get {
return m_Object;
}
set {
if (m_Object != value) {
m_Object = value;
OnObjectChanged(this, EventArgs.Empty);
}
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Triggered when the value of this object has changed.
/// </summary>
public event System.EventHandler<EventArgs> ObjectChanged;
/// <summary>
/// EventHandler wire-up
/// </summary>
protected virtual void OnObjectChanged(object sender, System.EventArgs e) {
if (ObjectChanged != null) {
ObjectChanged(sender, e);
}
}
/// <summary>
/// Gets the value
/// </summary>
public object Get() {
return this.Object;
}
/// <summary>
/// Sets the value
/// </summary>
public void Set(object value) {
this.Object = value;
}
}
}
Employee.cs
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// <copyright file="Employee.cs" company="DCOM Productions">
// Copyright (c) DCOM Productions. All rights reserved.
// </copyright>
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
namespace PropertyChangedEventExample {
using System;
public class Employee {
/// <summary>
/// Expose default constructor
/// </summary>
public Employee() {
Name = new ObservableObject();
}
/// <summary>
/// Gets or sets the name
/// </summary>
public ObservableObject Name {
get;
set;
}
}
}
Program.cs
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
// <copyright file="Program.cs" company="DCOM Productions">
// Copyright (c) DCOM Productions. All rights reserved.
// </copyright>
//-----------------------------------------------------------------------------
namespace PropertyChangedEventExample {
using System;
class Program {
static void Main(string[] args) {
Employee employee = new Employee();
employee.Name.Set("David");
employee.Name.ObjectChanged += new EventHandler<EventArgs>(Name_ObjectChanged);
employee.Name.Set("Dave");
Console.ReadKey(true);
}
static void Name_ObjectChanged(object sender, EventArgs e) {
ObservableObject employee = sender as ObservableObject;
Console.WriteLine("Name changed to {0}", employee.Get());
}
}
}
DoSomethingWhenEitherPropertyGetsChanged()
in your property setter so you can do the same call in the setters of properties of subclass.