322
votes

I collect a few corner cases and brain teasers and would always like to hear more. The page only really covers C# language bits and bobs, but I also find core .NET things interesting too. For example, here's one which isn't on the page, but which I find incredible:

string x = new string(new char[0]);
string y = new string(new char[0]);
Console.WriteLine(object.ReferenceEquals(x, y));

I'd expect that to print False - after all, "new" (with a reference type) always creates a new object, doesn't it? The specs for both C# and the CLI indicate that it should. Well, not in this particular case. It prints True, and has done on every version of the framework I've tested it with. (I haven't tried it on Mono, admittedly...)

Just to be clear, this is only an example of the kind of thing I'm looking for - I wasn't particularly looking for discussion/explanation of this oddity. (It's not the same as normal string interning; in particular, string interning doesn't normally happen when a constructor is called.) I was really asking for similar odd behaviour.

Any other gems lurking out there?

27
  • 64
    Tested on Mono 2.0 rc; returns True Oct 11, 2008 at 21:35
  • 10
    both strings end up being string.Empty and it appears that the framework keeps only one reference to that Jan 14, 2009 at 15:49
  • 34
    It's a memory conservation thing. Look up the MSDN documentation for the static method string.Intern. The CLR maintains a string pool. That's why strings with identical content shows up as references to the same memory i.e. object. Feb 23, 2009 at 12:48
  • 12
    @John: String interning only happens automatically for literals. That's not the case here. @DanielSwe: Interning isn't required for making strings immutable. The fact that it's possible is a nice corollary of immutability, but normal interning isn't happening here anyway.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 25, 2009 at 15:27
  • 3
    The implementation detail that causes this behavior is explained here: blog.liranchen.com/2010/08/brain-teasing-with-strings.html
    – Liran
    Sep 14, 2010 at 18:00

37 Answers 37

394
votes

I think I showed you this one before, but I like the fun here - this took some debugging to track down! (the original code was obviously more complex and subtle...)

    static void Foo<T>() where T : new()
    {
        T t = new T();
        Console.WriteLine(t.ToString()); // works fine
        Console.WriteLine(t.GetHashCode()); // works fine
        Console.WriteLine(t.Equals(t)); // works fine

        // so it looks like an object and smells like an object...

        // but this throws a NullReferenceException...
        Console.WriteLine(t.GetType());
    }

So what was T...

Answer: any Nullable<T> - such as int?. All the methods are overridden, except GetType() which can't be; so it is cast (boxed) to object (and hence to null) to call object.GetType()... which calls on null ;-p


Update: the plot thickens... Ayende Rahien threw down a similar challenge on his blog, but with a where T : class, new():

private static void Main() {
    CanThisHappen<MyFunnyType>();
}

public static void CanThisHappen<T>() where T : class, new() {
    var instance = new T(); // new() on a ref-type; should be non-null, then
    Debug.Assert(instance != null, "How did we break the CLR?");
}

But it can be defeated! Using the same indirection used by things like remoting; warning - the following is pure evil:

class MyFunnyProxyAttribute : ProxyAttribute {
    public override MarshalByRefObject CreateInstance(Type serverType) {
        return null;
    }
}
[MyFunnyProxy]
class MyFunnyType : ContextBoundObject { }

With this in place, the new() call is redirected to the proxy (MyFunnyProxyAttribute), which returns null. Now go and wash your eyes!

12
  • 9
    Why can't Nullable<T>.GetType() be defined? Shouldn't the result be typeof(Nullable<T>)? Oct 23, 2008 at 8:37
  • 69
    Drew: the problem is that GetType() isn't virtual, so it's not overridden - which means that the value is boxed for the method call. The box becomes a null reference, hence the NRE.
    – Jon Skeet
    Oct 25, 2008 at 19:52
  • 10
    @Drew; additionally, there are special boxing rules for Nullable<T>, which means that an empty Nullable<T> boxes to null, not a box that contains an empty Nullable<T> (and a null un-boxes to an empty Nullable<T>) Oct 26, 2008 at 8:34
  • 6
    Constructor-constraint, 10.1.5 in the C# 3.0 langauge spec Nov 4, 2009 at 16:39
  • 3
    Maybe Java's type erasure wasn't such a bad idea after all.
    – finnw
    Feb 4, 2010 at 21:30
216
votes

Bankers' Rounding.

This one is not so much a compiler bug or malfunction, but certainly a strange corner case...

The .Net Framework employs a scheme or rounding known as Banker's Rounding.

In Bankers' Rounding the 0.5 numbers are rounded to the nearest even number, so

Math.Round(-0.5) == 0
Math.Round(0.5) == 0
Math.Round(1.5) == 2
Math.Round(2.5) == 2
etc...

This can lead to some unexpected bugs in financial calculations based on the more well known Round-Half-Up rounding.

This is also true of Visual Basic.

15
  • 22
    It seemed strange to me too. That is, at least, until I had round a big list of numbers and calculate their sum. You then realize that if you simply round up, you will end up with potentially huge difference from the sum of the non-rounded numbers. Very bad if you are doing financial calculations! Oct 12, 2008 at 10:05
  • 255
    In case people didn't know, you can do: Math.Round(x, MidpointRounding.AwayFromZero); To change the rounding scheme.
    – ICR
    Oct 12, 2008 at 12:24
  • 26
    From the docs: The behavior of this method follows IEEE Standard 754, section 4. This kind of rounding is sometimes called rounding to nearest, or banker's rounding. It minimizes rounding errors that result from consistently rounding a midpoint value in a single direction.
    – ICR
    Oct 12, 2008 at 12:25
  • 8
    I wonder if this is why I see int(fVal + 0.5) so often even in languages which have a built-in rounding function.
    – Ben Blank
    Feb 24, 2009 at 19:50
  • 32
    Ironically, I worked at a bank once and the other programmers started flipping out about this, thinking that rounding was broken in the framework
    – dan
    Dec 29, 2009 at 20:43
176
votes

What will this function do if called as Rec(0) (not under the debugger)?

static void Rec(int i)
{
    Console.WriteLine(i);
    if (i < int.MaxValue)
    {
        Rec(i + 1);
    }
}

Answer:

  • On 32-bit JIT it should result in a StackOverflowException
  • On 64-bit JIT it should print all the numbers to int.MaxValue

This is because the 64-bit JIT compiler applies tail call optimisation, whereas the 32-bit JIT does not.

Unfortunately I haven't got a 64-bit machine to hand to verify this, but the method does meet all the conditions for tail-call optimisation. If anybody does have one I'd be interested to see if it's true.

16
  • 10
    Has to be compiled in release mode, but most definitely works on x64 =) Oct 12, 2008 at 18:43
  • 3
    might be worth updating your answer when VS 2010 comes out since all current JITs will then do the TCO in Release mode
    – ShuggyCoUk
    Jun 28, 2009 at 23:40
  • 3
    Just tried on VS2010 Beta 1 on 32-bit WinXP. Still get a StackOverflowException.
    – squillman
    Aug 26, 2009 at 20:45
  • 130
    +1 for the StackOverflowException Jan 5, 2010 at 17:14
  • 7
    That ++ there totally threw me off. Can't you call Rec(i + 1) like a normal person? Feb 25, 2011 at 0:32
111
votes

Assign This!


This is one that I like to ask at parties (which is probably why I don't get invited anymore):

Can you make the following piece of code compile?

    public void Foo()
    {
        this = new Teaser();
    }

An easy cheat could be:

string cheat = @"
    public void Foo()
    {
        this = new Teaser();
    }
";

But the real solution is this:

public struct Teaser
{
    public void Foo()
    {
        this = new Teaser();
    }
}

So it's a little know fact that value types (structs) can reassign their this variable.

8
  • 3
    C++ classes can do that too... as I discovered somewhat recently, only to be yelled at for actually trying to use it for an optimization :p
    – mpen
    Mar 1, 2010 at 7:48
  • 1
    I was using in-place new actually. Just wanted an efficient way to update all fields :)
    – mpen
    Mar 13, 2010 at 0:06
  • 70
    This is also a cheat: //this = new Teaser(); :-) Mar 18, 2010 at 11:06
  • 17
    :-) I'd prefer those cheats in my production code, than this reassignment abomination...
    – Omer Mor
    Mar 24, 2010 at 21:49
  • 2
    From CLR via C#: The reason they made this is because you can call the parameterless constructor of a struct in another constructor. If you only want to initialize one value of a struct and want the other values to be zero/null (default), you can write public Foo(int bar){this = new Foo(); specialVar = bar;}. This is not efficient and not really justified (specialVar is assigned twice), but just FYI. (That's the reason given in the book, I don't know why we shouldn't just do public Foo(int bar) : this())
    – kizzx2
    Jan 30, 2011 at 17:40
100
votes

Few years ago, when working on loyality program, we had an issue with the amount of points given to customers. The issue was related to casting/converting double to int.

In code below:

double d = 13.6;

int i1 = Convert.ToInt32(d);
int i2 = (int)d;

does i1 == i2 ?

It turns out that i1 != i2. Because of different rounding policies in Convert and cast operator the actual values are:

i1 == 14
i2 == 13

It's always better to call Math.Ceiling() or Math.Floor() (or Math.Round with MidpointRounding that meets our requirements)

int i1 = Convert.ToInt32( Math.Ceiling(d) );
int i2 = (int) Math.Ceiling(d);
4
  • 44
    Casting to an integer doesn't round, it just chops it off (effectively always rounding down). So this makes complete sense. May 14, 2009 at 17:34
  • 57
    @Max: yes, but why does Convert round? May 19, 2009 at 11:07
  • 18
    @Stefan Steinegger If all it did was cast, there would be no reason for it in the first place, would it? Also note that the class name is Convert not Cast.
    – bug-a-lot
    Aug 4, 2009 at 13:35
  • 3
    In VB: CInt() rounds. Fix() truncates. Burned me once (blog.wassupy.com/2006/01/i-can-believe-it-not-truncating.html) Aug 27, 2009 at 20:56
74
votes

They should have made 0 an integer even when there's an enum function overload.

I knew C# core team rationale for mapping 0 to enum, but still, it is not as orthogonal as it should be. Example from Npgsql.

Test example:

namespace Craft
{
    enum Symbol { Alpha = 1, Beta = 2, Gamma = 3, Delta = 4 };


   class Mate
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {

            JustTest(Symbol.Alpha); // enum
            JustTest(0); // why enum
            JustTest((int)0); // why still enum

            int i = 0;

            JustTest(Convert.ToInt32(0)); // have to use Convert.ToInt32 to convince the compiler to make the call site use the object version

            JustTest(i); // it's ok from down here and below
            JustTest(1);
            JustTest("string");
            JustTest(Guid.NewGuid());
            JustTest(new DataTable());

            Console.ReadLine();
        }

        static void JustTest(Symbol a)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Enum");
        }

        static void JustTest(object o)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Object");
        }
    }
}
10
  • 18
    Wow that's a new one for me. Also wierd how ConverTo.ToIn32() works but casting to (int)0 doesn't. And any other number > 0 works. (By "works" I mean call the object overload.)
    – Lucas
    Jun 12, 2009 at 18:52
  • There is a recommend code analysis rule to enforce good practices around this behavior: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms182149%28VS.80%29.aspx That link also contains a nice description of how the 0-mapping works. Dec 16, 2009 at 20:14
  • 1
    @Chris Clark: i tried putting None = 0 on enum Symbol. still the compiler chooses enum for 0 and even (int)0 Dec 17, 2009 at 0:51
  • 2
    IMO they should have introduced a keyword none which can be used converted to any enum, and made 0 always an int and not implicitly convertible to an enum. Nov 19, 2010 at 21:24
  • 5
    ConverTo.ToIn32() works because it's result is no compiletime constant. And only the compiletime constant 0 is convertible to an enum. In earlier versions of .net even only the literal 0 should have been convertible to enum. See Eric Lippert's blog: blogs.msdn.com/b/ericlippert/archive/2006/03/28/563282.aspx Nov 19, 2010 at 21:27
67
votes

This is one of the most unusual i've seen so far (aside from the ones here of course!):

public class Turtle<T> where T : Turtle<T>
{
}

It lets you declare it but has no real use, since it will always ask you to wrap whatever class you stuff in the center with another Turtle.

[joke] I guess it's turtles all the way down... [/joke]

12
  • 34
    You can create instances, though: class RealTurtle : Turtle<RealTurtle> { } RealTurtle t = new RealTurtle(); Aug 26, 2009 at 6:55
  • 24
    Indeed. This is the pattern that Java enums use to great effect. I use it in Protocol Buffers too.
    – Jon Skeet
    Aug 26, 2009 at 7:09
  • 6
    RCIX, oh yes it is.
    – Joshua
    Sep 1, 2009 at 16:22
  • 8
    I have used this pattern quite a lot in fancy generics stuff. It allows things like a correctly typed clone, or creating instances of itself.
    – Lucero
    Sep 10, 2009 at 19:31
  • 20
    This is the 'curiously recurring template pattern' en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Curiously_recurring_template_pattern
    – porges
    Nov 5, 2009 at 19:30
65
votes

Here's one I only found out about recently...

interface IFoo
{
   string Message {get;}
}
...
IFoo obj = new IFoo("abc");
Console.WriteLine(obj.Message);

The above looks crazy at first glance, but is actually legal.No, really (although I've missed out a key part, but it isn't anything hacky like "add a class called IFoo" or "add a using alias to point IFoo at a class").

See if you can figure out why, then: Who says you can’t instantiate an interface?

3
  • 1
    +1 for "using alias" - I never knew you could do that!
    – David
    Feb 9, 2010 at 4:37
  • hack in the compiler for COM Interop :-)
    – user90843
    Jun 3, 2011 at 19:08
  • You bastard! You could have at least said "under certain circumstances"... My compiler disproves!
    – M.A. Hanin
    Nov 8, 2011 at 20:18
56
votes

When is a Boolean neither True nor False?

Bill discovered that you can hack a boolean so that if A is True and B is True, (A and B) is False.

Hacked Booleans

7
  • 134
    When it's FILE_NOT_FOUND, of course!
    – Greg
    Dec 18, 2008 at 14:47
  • 12
    This is interesting because it means, mathematically speaking, that no statement in C# is provable. Ooops. Feb 1, 2009 at 0:56
  • 20
    Someday I shall write a program that depends on this behavior, and the demons of darkest hell will prepare a welcome for me. Bwahahahahaha! Nov 25, 2009 at 22:23
  • 18
    This example uses bitwise, not logical operators. How is that surprising?
    – Josh Lee
    Nov 26, 2009 at 17:02
  • 6
    Well, he hacks the layout of the struct, of course you'll get weird results, this is not that surprising or unexpected!
    – user90843
    May 19, 2010 at 3:18
47
votes

I'm arriving a bit late to the party, but I've got three four five:

  1. If you poll InvokeRequired on a control that hasn't been loaded/shown, it will say false - and blow up in your face if you try to change it from another thread (the solution is to reference this.Handle in the creator of the control).

  2. Another one which tripped me up is that given an assembly with:

    enum MyEnum
    {
        Red,
        Blue,
    }
    

    if you calculate MyEnum.Red.ToString() in another assembly, and in between times someone has recompiled your enum to:

    enum MyEnum
    {
        Black,
        Red,
        Blue,
    }
    

    at runtime, you will get "Black".

  3. I had a shared assembly with some handy constants in. My predecessor had left a load of ugly-looking get-only properties, I thought I'd get rid of the clutter and just use public const. I was more than a little surprised when VS compiled them to their values, and not references.

  4. If you implement a new method of an interface from another assembly, but you rebuild referencing the old version of that assembly, you get a TypeLoadException (no implementation of 'NewMethod'), even though you have implemented it (see here).

  5. Dictionary<,>: "The order in which the items are returned is undefined". This is horrible, because it can bite you sometimes, but work others, and if you've just blindly assumed that Dictionary is going to play nice ("why shouldn't it? I thought, List does"), you really have to have your nose in it before you finally start to question your assumption.

11
  • 6
    #2 is an interesting example. Enums are compiler mappings to integral values. So even though you didn't explicitly assign them values, the compiler did, resulting in MyEnum.Red = 0 and MyEnum.Blue = 1. When you added Black, you redefined the value 0 to map from Red to Black. I suspect that the problem would have manifested in other usages as well, such as Serialization.
    – LBushkin
    May 25, 2009 at 3:02
  • 3
    +1 for Invoke required. At ours' we prefer to explicitly assign values to enums like Red=1,Blue=2 so new one can be inserted before or after it will always result in same value. It is specially necessary if you are saving values to databases. Jun 4, 2009 at 9:40
  • 53
    I disagree that #5 is an "edge case". Dictionary should not have a defined order based on when you insert values. If you want a defined order, use a List, or use a key that can be sorted in a way that's useful to you, or use an entirely different data structure.
    – Wedge
    Jun 26, 2009 at 8:30
  • 21
    @Wedge, like SortedDictionary perhaps? Aug 22, 2009 at 16:54
  • 4
    #3 happens because constants are inserted as literals everywhere they're used (in C#, at least). Your predecessor might have already noticed it, which is why they used the get-only property. However, a readonly variable (as opposed to a const) would work just as well.
    – Remoun
    Sep 30, 2009 at 9:21
33
votes

VB.NET, nullables and the ternary operator:

Dim i As Integer? = If(True, Nothing, 5)

This took me some time to debug, since I expected i to contain Nothing.

What does i really contain? 0.

This is surprising but actually "correct" behavior: Nothing in VB.NET is not exactly the same as null in CLR: Nothing can either mean null or default(T) for a value type T, depending on the context. In the above case, If infers Integer as the common type of Nothing and 5, so, in this case, Nothing means 0.

1
  • Interesting enough, I failed to find this answer so I had to create a question. Well, who knew the answer is in this thread?
    – GSerg
    Mar 22, 2011 at 15:48
28
votes

I found a second really strange corner case that beats my first one by a long shot.

String.Equals Method (String, String, StringComparison) is not actually side effect free.

I was working on a block of code that had this on a line by itself at the top of some function:

stringvariable1.Equals(stringvariable2, StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase);

Removing that line lead to a stack overflow somewhere else in the program.

The code turned out to be installing a handler for what was in essence a BeforeAssemblyLoad event and trying to do

if (assemblyfilename.EndsWith("someparticular.dll", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase))
{
    assemblyfilename = "someparticular_modified.dll";
}

By now I shouldn't have to tell you. Using a culture that hasn't been used before in a string comparison causes an assembly load. InvariantCulture is not an exception to this.

2
  • I guess "loading an assembly" is a side effect, since you can observe it with BeforeAssemblyLoad! Oct 13, 2009 at 20:10
  • 2
    Wow. This is a perfect shot into the maintainer's leg. I guess writing a BeforeAssemblyLoad handler can lead to lots of such surprises.
    – wigy
    Feb 1, 2011 at 19:05
20
votes

Here is an example of how you can create a struct that causes the error message "Attempted to read or write protected memory. This is often an indication that other memory is corrupt". The difference between success and failure is very subtle.

The following unit test demonstrates the problem.

See if you can work out what went wrong.

    [Test]
    public void Test()
    {
        var bar = new MyClass
        {
            Foo = 500
        };
        bar.Foo += 500;

        Assert.That(bar.Foo.Value.Amount, Is.EqualTo(1000));
    }

    private class MyClass
    {
        public MyStruct? Foo { get; set; }
    }

    private struct MyStruct
    {
        public decimal Amount { get; private set; }

        public MyStruct(decimal amount) : this()
        {
            Amount = amount;
        }

        public static MyStruct operator +(MyStruct x, MyStruct y)
        {
            return new MyStruct(x.Amount + y.Amount);
        }

        public static MyStruct operator +(MyStruct x, decimal y)
        {
            return new MyStruct(x.Amount + y);
        }

        public static implicit operator MyStruct(int value)
        {
            return new MyStruct(value);
        }

        public static implicit operator MyStruct(decimal value)
        {
            return new MyStruct(value);
        }
    }
8
  • My head hurts... Why doesn't this work?
    – jasonh
    Jul 13, 2009 at 23:44
  • 2
    Hm i wrote this a few months ago, but I can't remember why exactly it happened.
    – cbp
    Aug 6, 2009 at 6:50
  • 10
    Looks like a compiler bug; the += 500 calls: ldc.i4 500 (pushes 500 as an Int32), then call valuetype Program/MyStruct Program/MyStruct::op_Addition(valuetype Program/MyStruct, valuetype [mscorlib]System.Decimal) - so it then treats as a decimal (96-bits) without any conversion. If you use += 500M it gets it right. It simply looks like the compiler thinks it can do it one way (presumably due to the implicit int operator) and then decides to do it another way. Sep 12, 2009 at 10:17
  • 1
    Sorry for the double post, here's a more qualified explanation. I'll add this, I have been bit by this and this it sucks, even though I understand why it happens. To me this is an unfortunate limitation of the struct/valuetype. bytes.com/topic/net/answers/… Oct 9, 2009 at 3:59
  • 2
    @Ben getting compiler errors or the modification not affecting the original struct is fine. An access violation is quite a different beast. The runtime should never throw it if you're just writing safe pure managed code. Nov 19, 2010 at 21:59
18
votes

C# supports conversions between arrays and lists as long as the arrays are not multidimensional and there is an inheritance relation between the types and the types are reference types

object[] oArray = new string[] { "one", "two", "three" };
string[] sArray = (string[])oArray;

// Also works for IList (and IEnumerable, ICollection)
IList<string> sList = (IList<string>)oArray;
IList<object> oList = new string[] { "one", "two", "three" };

Note that this does not work:

object[] oArray2 = new int[] { 1, 2, 3 }; // Error: Cannot implicitly convert type 'int[]' to 'object[]'
int[] iArray = (int[])oArray2;            // Error: Cannot convert type 'object[]' to 'int[]'
1
  • 11
    The IList<T> example is just a cast, because string[] already implements ICloneable, IList, ICollection, IEnumerable, IList<string>, ICollection<string>, and IEnumerable<string>.
    – Lucas
    Jun 12, 2009 at 18:46
15
votes

This is the strangest I've encountered by accident:

public class DummyObject
{
    public override string ToString()
    {
        return null;
    }
}

Used as follows:

DummyObject obj = new DummyObject();
Console.WriteLine("The text: " + obj.GetType() + " is " + obj);

Will throw a NullReferenceException. Turns out the multiple additions are compiled by the C# compiler to a call to String.Concat(object[]). Prior to .NET 4, there is a bug in just that overload of Concat where the object is checked for null, but not the result of ToString():

object obj2 = args[i];
string text = (obj2 != null) ? obj2.ToString() : string.Empty;
// if obj2 is non-null, but obj2.ToString() returns null, then text==null
int length = text.Length;

This is a bug by ECMA-334 §14.7.4:

The binary + operator performs string concatenation when one or both operands are of type string. If an operand of string concatenation is null, an empty string is substituted. Otherwise, any non-string operand is converted to its string representation by invoking the virtual ToString method inherited from type object. If ToString returns null, an empty string is substituted.

1
  • 3
    Hmm, but I can imagine this fault as .ToString really should never return null, but string.Empty. Nevertheless and error in the framework.
    – Dykam
    Mar 1, 2010 at 7:44
12
votes

Interesting - when I first looked at that I assumed it was something the C# compiler was checking for, but even if you emit the IL directly to remove any chance of interference it still happens, which means it really is the newobj op-code that's doing the checking.

var method = new DynamicMethod("Test", null, null);
var il = method.GetILGenerator();

il.Emit(OpCodes.Ldc_I4_0);
il.Emit(OpCodes.Newarr, typeof(char));
il.Emit(OpCodes.Newobj, typeof(string).GetConstructor(new[] { typeof(char[]) }));

il.Emit(OpCodes.Ldc_I4_0);
il.Emit(OpCodes.Newarr, typeof(char));
il.Emit(OpCodes.Newobj, typeof(string).GetConstructor(new[] { typeof(char[]) }));

il.Emit(OpCodes.Call, typeof(object).GetMethod("ReferenceEquals"));
il.Emit(OpCodes.Box, typeof(bool));
il.Emit(OpCodes.Call, typeof(Console).GetMethod("WriteLine", new[] { typeof(object) }));

il.Emit(OpCodes.Ret);

method.Invoke(null, null);

It also equates to true if you check against string.Empty which means this op-code must have special behaviour to intern empty strings.

2
  • not to be a smart aleck or anything but have you heard of the reflector? it's quite handy in these sorts of cases;
    – RCIX
    Jul 13, 2009 at 23:29
  • 3
    You're not being smart; you're missing the point - I wanted to generate specific IL for this one case. And anyway, given that Reflection.Emit is trivial for this type of scenario, it's probably as quick as writing a program in C# then opening reflector, finding the binary, finding the method, etc... And I don't even have to leave the IDE to do it.
    – Greg Beech
    Jul 14, 2009 at 9:35
10
votes
Public Class Item
   Public ID As Guid
   Public Text As String

   Public Sub New(ByVal id As Guid, ByVal name As String)
      Me.ID = id
      Me.Text = name
   End Sub
End Class

Public Sub Load(sender As Object, e As EventArgs) Handles Me.Load
   Dim box As New ComboBox
   Me.Controls.Add(box)          'Sorry I forgot this line the first time.'
   Dim h As IntPtr = box.Handle  'Im not sure you need this but you might.'
   Try
      box.Items.Add(New Item(Guid.Empty, Nothing))
   Catch ex As Exception
      MsgBox(ex.ToString())
   End Try
End Sub

The output is "Attempted to read protected memory. This is an indication that other memory is corrupt."

6
  • 1
    Interesting! Sounds like a compiler bug, though; I've ported to C# and it works fine. That said, there are a lot of issues with exceptions thrown in Load, and it behaves differently with/without a debugger - you can catch with a debugger, but not without (in some cases). Oct 11, 2008 at 21:44
  • Sorry, I forgot, you need to add the combo box to the form before it will.
    – Joshua
    Oct 12, 2008 at 2:07
  • Is this to do with dialog initialization using an SEH as some kind of horrible internal communication mechanism? I vaguely remember something like that in Win32. Mar 14, 2009 at 17:54
  • 1
    This is the same problem cbp above. The valuetype being returned is a copy, therefore any references to any properties stemming from said copy are headed to bit-bucket land... bytes.com/topic/net/answers/… Oct 9, 2009 at 4:04
  • 1
    Nope. There are no structs here. I actually debugged it. It adds a NULL to the list item collection of the native combo box causing a delayed crash.
    – Joshua
    Oct 9, 2009 at 15:24
10
votes

PropertyInfo.SetValue() can assign ints to enums, ints to nullable ints, enums to nullable enums, but not ints to nullable enums.

enumProperty.SetValue(obj, 1, null); //works
nullableIntProperty.SetValue(obj, 1, null); //works
nullableEnumProperty.SetValue(obj, MyEnum.Foo, null); //works
nullableEnumProperty.SetValue(obj, 1, null); // throws an exception !!!

Full description here

10
votes

What if you have a generic class that has methods that could be made ambiguous depending on the type arguments? I ran into this situation recently writing a two-way dictionary. I wanted to write symmetric Get() methods that would return the opposite of whatever argument was passed. Something like this:

class TwoWayRelationship<T1, T2>
{
    public T2 Get(T1 key) { /* ... */ }
    public T1 Get(T2 key) { /* ... */ }
}

All is well good if you make an instance where T1 and T2 are different types:

var r1 = new TwoWayRelationship<int, string>();
r1.Get(1);
r1.Get("a");

But if T1 and T2 are the same (and probably if one was a subclass of another), it's a compiler error:

var r2 = new TwoWayRelationship<int, int>();
r2.Get(1);  // "The call is ambiguous..."

Interestingly, all other methods in the second case are still usable; it's only calls to the now-ambiguous method that causes a compiler error. Interesting case, if a little unlikely and obscure.

2
  • Opponents of method overloading will love this one ^^. Sep 8, 2010 at 21:43
  • 1
    I don't know, this makes total sense to me. Mar 18, 2011 at 17:02
10
votes

C# Accessibility Puzzler


The following derived class is accessing a private field from its base class, and the compiler silently looks to the other side:

public class Derived : Base
{
    public int BrokenAccess()
    {
        return base.m_basePrivateField;
    }
}

The field is indeed private:

private int m_basePrivateField = 0;

Care to guess how we can make such code compile?

.

.

.

.

.

.

.

Answer


The trick is to declare Derived as an inner class of Base:

public class Base
{
    private int m_basePrivateField = 0;

    public class Derived : Base
    {
        public int BrokenAccess()
        {
            return base.m_basePrivateField;
        }
    }
}

Inner classes are given full access to the outer class members. In this case the inner class also happens to derive from the outer class. This allows us to "break" the encapsulation of private members.

4
  • That actually is well-documented; msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms173120%28VS.80%29.aspx. It can be a useful feature at times, especially if the outer class is static.
    – user438034
    Oct 20, 2010 at 0:02
  • Yes - of course it's documented. However, very few people solved this puzzle so I thought it's a cool piece of trivia.
    – Omer Mor
    Oct 20, 2010 at 7:51
  • 2
    Seems like you'd have a very strong possibility of a stack overflow by having an inner class inherit its owner... Oct 28, 2010 at 16:58
  • Yet another similar (and perfectly correct) case is that an object can access a private member of another object of the same type: class A { private int _i; public void foo(A other) { int res = other._i; } } Nov 12, 2011 at 20:02
10
votes

Just found a nice little thing today:

public class Base
{
   public virtual void Initialize(dynamic stuff) { 
   //...
   }
}
public class Derived:Base
{
   public override void Initialize(dynamic stuff) {
   base.Initialize(stuff);
   //...
   }
}

This throws compile error.

The call to method 'Initialize' needs to be dynamically dispatched, but cannot be because it is part of a base access expression. Consider casting the dynamic arguments or eliminating the base access.

If I write base.Initialize(stuff as object); it works perfectly, however this seems to be a "magic word" here, since it does exactly the same, everything is still recieved as dynamic...

8
votes

In an API we're using, methods that return a domain object might return a special "null object". In the implementation of this, the comparison operator and the Equals() method are overridden to return true if it is compared with null.

So a user of this API might have some code like this:

return test != null ? test : GetDefault();

or perhaps a bit more verbose, like this:

if (test == null)
    return GetDefault();
return test;

where GetDefault() is a method returning some default value that we want to use instead of null. The surprise hit me when I was using ReSharper and following it's recommendation to rewrite either of this to the following:

return test ?? GetDefault();

If the test object is a null object returned from the API instead of a proper null, the behavior of the code has now changed, as the null coalescing operator actually checks for null, not running operator= or Equals().

3
  • 1
    not really a c# corner case, but dear lord who thought that up?!? Jun 22, 2010 at 8:03
  • Isn't this code just using nullable types? Hence ReSharper recommending the "??" use. As Ray said, I wouldn't have thought this a corner case; or am I wrong?
    – Tony
    Jun 22, 2010 at 14:14
  • 1
    Yes, the types are nullable - and there is a NullObject in addition. If it is a corner case, I don't know, but at least it is a case where 'if (a != null) return a; return b;' is not the same as 'return a ?? b'. I absolutely agree it is a problem with the framework/API design - overloading == null to return true on an object is certainly not at good idea!
    – Tor Livar
    Jun 22, 2010 at 14:47
8
votes

Consider this weird case:

public interface MyInterface {
  void Method();
}
public class Base {
  public void Method() { }
}
public class Derived : Base, MyInterface { }

If Base and Derived are declared in the same assembly, the compiler will make Base::Method virtual and sealed (in the CIL), even though Base doesn't implement the interface.

If Base and Derived are in different assemblies, when compiling the Derived assembly, the compiler won't change the other assembly, so it will introduce a member in Derived that will be an explicit implementation for MyInterface::Method that will just delegate the call to Base::Method.

The compiler has to do this in order to support polymorphic dispatch with regards to the interface, i.e. it has to make that method virtual.

2
  • That does indeed sound odd. Will have to investigate later :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Jan 5, 2011 at 14:16
  • @Jon Skeet: I found this while researching implementation strategies for roles in C#. Would be great to get your feedback on that one!
    – Jordão
    Jan 5, 2011 at 17:19
7
votes

The following might be general knowledge I was just simply lacking, but eh. Some time ago, we had a bug case which included virtual properties. Abstracting the context a bit, consider the following code, and apply breakpoint to specified area :

class Program
{
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        Derived d = new Derived();
        d.Property = "AWESOME";
    }
}

class Base
{
    string _baseProp;
    public virtual string Property 
    { 
        get 
        {
            return "BASE_" + _baseProp;
        }
        set
        {
            _baseProp = value;
            //do work with the base property which might 
            //not be exposed to derived types
            //here
            Console.Out.WriteLine("_baseProp is BASE_" + value.ToString());
        }
    }
}

class Derived : Base
{
    string _prop;
    public override string Property 
    {
        get { return _prop; }
        set 
        { 
            _prop = value; 
            base.Property = value;
        } //<- put a breakpoint here then mouse over BaseProperty, 
          //   and then mouse over the base.Property call inside it.
    }

    public string BaseProperty { get { return base.Property; } private set { } }
}

While in the Derived object context, you can get the same behavior when adding base.Property as a watch, or typing base.Property into the quickwatch.

Took me some time to realize what was going on. In the end I was enlightened by the Quickwatch. When going into the Quickwatch and exploring the Derived object d (or from the object's context, this) and selecting the field base, the edit field on top of the Quickwatch displays the following cast:

((TestProject1.Base)(d))

Which means that if base is replaced as such, the call would be

public string BaseProperty { get { return ((TestProject1.Base)(d)).Property; } private set { } }

for the Watches, Quickwatch and the debugging mouse-over tooltips, and it would then make sense for it to display "AWESOME" instead of "BASE_AWESOME" when considering polymorphism. I'm still unsure why it would transform it into a cast, one hypothesis is that call might not be available from those modules' context, and only callvirt.

Anyhow, that obviously doesn't alter anything in terms of functionality, Derived.BaseProperty will still really return "BASE_AWESOME", and thus this was not the root of our bug at work, simply a confusing component. I did however find it interesting how it could mislead developpers which would be unaware of that fact during their debug sessions, specially if Base is not exposed in your project but rather referenced as a 3rd party DLL, resulting in Devs just saying :

"Oi, wait..what ? omg that DLL is like, ..doing something funny"

1
  • That's nothing special, that's just the way overrides work. Feb 25, 2011 at 0:54
7
votes

This one's pretty hard to top. I ran into it while I was trying to build a RealProxy implementation that truly supports Begin/EndInvoke (thanks MS for making this impossible to do without horrible hacks). This example is basically a bug in the CLR, the unmanaged code path for BeginInvoke doesn't validate that the return message from RealProxy.PrivateInvoke (and my Invoke override) is returning an instance of an IAsyncResult. Once it's returned, the CLR gets incredibly confused and loses any idea of whats going on, as demonstrated by the tests at the bottom.

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Runtime.Remoting.Proxies;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Runtime.Remoting.Messaging;

namespace BrokenProxy
{
    class NotAnIAsyncResult
    {
        public string SomeProperty { get; set; }
    }

    class BrokenProxy : RealProxy
    {
        private void HackFlags()
        {
            var flagsField = typeof(RealProxy).GetField("_flags", BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance);
            int val = (int)flagsField.GetValue(this);
            val |= 1; // 1 = RemotingProxy, check out System.Runtime.Remoting.Proxies.RealProxyFlags
            flagsField.SetValue(this, val);
        }

        public BrokenProxy(Type t)
            : base(t)
        {
            HackFlags();
        }

        public override IMessage Invoke(IMessage msg)
        {
            var naiar = new NotAnIAsyncResult();
            naiar.SomeProperty = "o noes";
            return new ReturnMessage(naiar, null, 0, null, (IMethodCallMessage)msg);
        }
    }

    interface IRandomInterface
    {
        int DoSomething();
    }

    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            BrokenProxy bp = new BrokenProxy(typeof(IRandomInterface));
            var instance = (IRandomInterface)bp.GetTransparentProxy();
            Func<int> doSomethingDelegate = instance.DoSomething;
            IAsyncResult notAnIAsyncResult = doSomethingDelegate.BeginInvoke(null, null);

            var interfaces = notAnIAsyncResult.GetType().GetInterfaces();
            Console.WriteLine(!interfaces.Any() ? "No interfaces on notAnIAsyncResult" : "Interfaces");
            Console.WriteLine(notAnIAsyncResult is IAsyncResult); // Should be false, is it?!
            Console.WriteLine(((NotAnIAsyncResult)notAnIAsyncResult).SomeProperty);
            Console.WriteLine(((IAsyncResult)notAnIAsyncResult).IsCompleted); // No way this works.
        }
    }
}

Output:

No interfaces on notAnIAsyncResult
True
o noes

Unhandled Exception: System.EntryPointNotFoundException: Entry point was not found.
   at System.IAsyncResult.get_IsCompleted()
   at BrokenProxy.Program.Main(String[] args) 
6
votes

I'm not sure if you'd say this is a Windows Vista/7 oddity or a .Net oddity but it had me scratching my head for a while.

string filename = @"c:\program files\my folder\test.txt";
System.IO.File.WriteAllText(filename, "Hello world.");
bool exists = System.IO.File.Exists(filename); // returns true;
string text = System.IO.File.ReadAllText(filename); // Returns "Hello world."

In Windows Vista/7 the file will actually be written to C:\Users\<username>\Virtual Store\Program Files\my folder\test.txt

4
  • 2
    This is indeed a vista (not 7, afaik) security enhancement. But the cool thing is that you can read and open the file with the program files path, while if you look there with explorer there is nothing. This one took me almost a day of work @ a customer before I finally found it out.
    – Henri
    Mar 11, 2010 at 22:02
  • It's definitely a Windows 7 thing too. That's what I was using when I ran into it. I understand the reasoning behind it but it was still frustrating to figure out. Mar 12, 2010 at 4:35
  • In Vista/Win 7 (winXP technically too) apps should write to an AppData folder in Users-folder land, as its technically user data. Applications shouldn't write to programfiles/windows/system32/etc ever, unless they have admin priveledges, and those priveledges should only be there to say upgrade the program/uninstall it/install new feature. BUT! Still don't write to system32/windows/etc :) If you ran that code above as admin (right click > run as admin) it should theoretically write to the program files app folder. Mar 31, 2010 at 22:15
  • Sounds like Virtualization - crispybit.spaces.live.com/blog/cns!1B71C2122AD43308!134.entry Jun 1, 2010 at 10:51
6
votes

Have you ever thought the C# compiler could generate invalid CIL? Run this and you'll get a TypeLoadException:

interface I<T> {
  T M(T p);
}
abstract class A<T> : I<T> {
  public abstract T M(T p);
}
abstract class B<T> : A<T>, I<int> {
  public override T M(T p) { return p; }
  public int M(int p) { return p * 2; }
}
class C : B<int> { }

class Program {
  static void Main(string[] args) {
    Console.WriteLine(new C().M(42));
  }
}

I don't know how it fares in the C# 4.0 compiler though.

EDIT: this is the output from my system:

C:\Temp>type Program.cs
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApplication1 {

  interface I<T> {
    T M(T p);
  }
  abstract class A<T> : I<T> {
    public abstract T M(T p);
  }
  abstract class B<T> : A<T>, I<int> {
    public override T M(T p) { return p; }
    public int M(int p) { return p * 2; }
  }
  class C : B<int> { }

  class Program {
    static void Main(string[] args) {
      Console.WriteLine(new C().M(11));
    }
  }

}
C:\Temp>csc Program.cs
Microsoft (R) Visual C# 2008 Compiler version 3.5.30729.1
for Microsoft (R) .NET Framework version 3.5
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.


C:\Temp>Program

Unhandled Exception: System.TypeLoadException: Could not load type 'ConsoleAppli
cation1.C' from assembly 'Program, Version=0.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyTo
ken=null'.
   at ConsoleApplication1.Program.Main(String[] args)

C:\Temp>peverify Program.exe

Microsoft (R) .NET Framework PE Verifier.  Version  3.5.30729.1
Copyright (c) Microsoft Corporation.  All rights reserved.

[token  0x02000005] Type load failed.
[IL]: Error: [C:\Temp\Program.exe : ConsoleApplication1.Program::Main][offset 0x
00000001] Unable to resolve token.
2 Error(s) Verifying Program.exe

C:\Temp>ver

Microsoft Windows XP [Version 5.1.2600]
3
  • Works for me with both the C# 3.5 compiler and the C# 4 compiler...
    – Jon Skeet
    Apr 8, 2010 at 19:11
  • In my system, it doesn't work. I'll paste the output in the question.
    – Jordão
    Apr 9, 2010 at 16:27
  • It failed for me in .NET 3.5 (don't have time to test 4.0). And I can replicate the problem with VB.NET code.
    – Mark Hurd
    Sep 4, 2010 at 5:35
3
votes

There is something really exciting about C#, the way it handles closures.

Instead of copying the stack variable values to the closure free variable, it does that preprocessor magic wrapping all occurences of the variable into an object and thus moves it out of stack - straight to the heap! :)

I guess, that makes C# even more functionally-complete (or lambda-complete huh)) language than ML itself (which uses stack value copying AFAIK). F# has that feature too, as C# does.

That does bring much delight to me, thank you MS guys!

It's not an oddity or corner case though... but something really unexpected from a stack-based VM language :)

3
votes

From a question I asked not long ago:

Conditional operator cannot cast implicitly?

Given:

Bool aBoolValue;

Where aBoolValue is assigned either True or False;

The following will not compile:

Byte aByteValue = aBoolValue ? 1 : 0;

But this would:

Int anIntValue = aBoolValue ? 1 : 0;

The answer provided is pretty good too.

2
  • although Ive not test it Im sure that this will work: Byte aByteValue = aBoolValue ? (Byte)1 :(Byte) 0; Or: Byte aByteValue =(Byte)( aBoolValue ? 1 : 0); May 10, 2010 at 12:59
  • 2
    Yes, Alex, that would work. The key is in the implicit casting. 1 : 0 alone will implicitly cast to int, not Byte.
    – MPelletier
    May 14, 2010 at 3:07
2
votes

The scoping in c# is truly bizarre at times. Lets me give you one example:

if (true)
{
   OleDbCommand command = SQLServer.CreateCommand();
}

OleDbCommand command = SQLServer.CreateCommand();

This fails to compile, because command is redeclared? There are some interested guesswork as to why it works that way in this thread on stackoverflow and in my blog.

6
  • 34
    I don't view that as particularly bizarre. What you call "perfectly correct code" in your blog is perfectly incorrect according to the language specification. It may be correct in some imaginary language you'd like C# to be, but the language spec is quite clear that in C# it's invalid.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 26, 2009 at 8:48
  • 7
    Well it is valid in C/C++. And since it is C# I would have liked it to still work. What bugs me the most is that there is no reason for the compiler to do this. It's not like it hard to do nested scoping. I guess it all comes down to the element of least suprise. Meaning that it can be that the spec says this and that, but that doesn't really help me very much if it's completely illogical that it behaves that way. Jun 26, 2009 at 9:08
  • 6
    C# != C/C++. Would you also like to use cout << "Hello World!" << endl; instead of Console.WriteLine("Hello World!");? Also it not illogical, just read the spec.
    – Kredns
    Jun 28, 2009 at 18:32
  • 9
    I am speaking about scoping rules which is part of the core of the language. You are speaking about the standard library. But it's now clear to me that I should simply read the tiny specification of c# language before I start programming in it. Jun 29, 2009 at 16:11
  • 6
    Eric Lippert actually posted the reasons why C# is designed like that recently: blogs.msdn.com/ericlippert/archive/2009/11/02/…. The summary is because it's less likely that changes will have unintended consequences.
    – Helephant
    Nov 25, 2009 at 17:16

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