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Is there a way to share an enum definition between native (unmanaged) C++ and (managed) C#?

I have the following enum used in completely unmanaged code:

enum MyEnum { myVal1, myVal2 };

Our application sometimes uses a managed component. That C# component gets the enum item values as ints via a managed C++ interop dll (from the native dll). (The interop dll only loads if the C# component is needed.) The C# component has duplicated the enum definition:

public enum MyEnum { myVal1, myVal2 };

Is there a way to eliminate the duplication without turning the native C++ dll into a managed dll?

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5 Answers

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Something in your build process would need to insert this enum into the C# file. If you don't have WIN32 defined as a pre-processor in your C++ project, you can use another pre-processor definition instead. This compiles in both C++ and C#:

#if !WIN32
    public
#endif
    enum MyEnum { myVal1, myVal2 };

UPDATE You can use a single .h file and share it between both projects, have the contents of the .h file be this:

#if !WIN32

namespace MyNamespace
{
    public
#endif

// shared enum for both C++ and C# - for C# make sure to set the build action of this file to 'Compile' as
// Visual Studio will think the .h is a regular content file by default.
enum MyEnum { myVal1, myVal2 };

#if !WIN32
}
#endif
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Alternately #if !__cplusplus public ... – sixlettervariables Jun 5 at 17:03
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I just tested something similar - but the file is named MyEnum.cs. So that it compiles is C# without any special rules. In my C++ file this works: #include "MyEnum.cs" – sean e Jun 5 at 19:35
Awesome, glad you got it working! – Jeff Johnson Jun 5 at 19:37
Thanks for the help. Confirmed it works as expected - no change to C# project settings (other than adding link to the new cs file). Funny to see a #include of a .cs file in a C++. – sean e Jun 5 at 22:53
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I think it depends on exactly what you are trying to accomplish. Would generating one from the other be good enough for your problem?

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Yes, generating one from the other during the build process would work. – sean e Jun 5 at 16:23
What I want to accomplish is not having the enum duplicated. But I have runtime limitations - the C# library will only be installed in certain environments. The C# library is used to enhance functionality in the native dll only in a subset of the environments in which the native dll will run. – sean e Jun 5 at 16:33
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I've had the same problem in the past and solved it using preprocessor definitions.

In your unmanaged code, inside a header that can also be included by your managed wrapper, place your enumeration items into a #define.

Then, in your managed and unmanaged enumeration definitions, use the same #define for both usages.

The movement of the enumerations between the managed and unmanaged world looks slightly nasty (basically a cast is needed), but to your caller in the unmanaged world, it'll look and feel fine.

Good luck,

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I'm missing something... use a header in C#? – sean e Jun 5 at 16:25
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You can expose the C# library to COM and then import the type library into the unmanaged code - this way you will be able to use the enum defined in C# library in the unmanaged library.

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That's an interesting approach. It has the side-effect that an otherwise unexposed enum becomes COM public. Unfortunately, the C# library may not run ever run/load due to framework incompatibility on target OSs. – sean e Jun 5 at 16:28
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Unmanaged C++ and C# live in two different worlds, so no there is no way to use the same enum, without changing the c++ DLL into a managed one.

And even then, you'd probably need the duplication in the managed C++ DLL.

A C++ enum is much like a list of constants, whereas a C# enum inherits the Enum class, and thus provides quite a few "tricks". So as you can see, they're very different.

If it doesn't matter whether the native C++ DLL is native or managed, I'd turn it into a managed one and wrap the native calls inside a managed C++ Layer.

That way you can have the enum duplication inside the C++ DLL, and also you can get rid of all the interop at the same time :-)

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Unfortunately, the native dll can not become managed. – sean e Jun 5 at 19:19

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