The code below will compile but fails at runtime. It's provided just to give an idea of what I'm trying to do. What I would like to do is create a method that accepts a collection of objects (effectively an "untyped" collection) and if this collect is comprised of numbers of a single type return the mean using the Average() extension method
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
namespace nnConsole {
class Program {
static void Main(string[] args) {
var ints = new object[4] { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
var dbls = new object[4] { 1.0, 2.0, 3.0, 4.0 };
Console.WriteLine(ReallyMean(ints));
Console.WriteLine(ReallyMean(dbls));
}
static public double ReallyMean(ICollection<object> data) {
var unique = data.Distinct();
var types = unique.Select(x => x.GetType()).Distinct();
if (types.Count() == 1) {
if (types.First().IsValueType) {
/***********************
* magic here to create ddata var that will
* call the appropriate extension method for average */
dynamic ddata = data; // DOES NOT WORK
return ddata.Average();
}
}
return double.NaN;
}
}
}
I'm sure I could use reflection to find the appropriate Average method and invoke it (not pretty). Is there a shorter/cleaner/better way to do this? I can use the latest C# and .NET runtime.
Double.NaN
for this, you can return aNullable<double>
, if an average makes no sense you should return no average not an invalid average. What you want to do here is essentially check if a collection has a method and if it does invoke it. This totally breaks type safety, I'd be really surprised if it's possible without reflection (with reflection - like you said it's trivial).this
.