I find the lack of indexed properties very frustrating when trying to write clean, concise code. An indexed property has a very different connotation than providing a class reference that's indexed or providing individual methods. I find it a bit disturbing that providing access to an internal object that implements an indexed property is even considered acceptable since that often breaks one of the key components of object orientation: encapsulation.
I run into this problem often enough, but I just encountered it again today so I'll provide a real world code example. The interface and class being written stores application configuration which is a collection of loosely related information. I needed to add named script fragments and using the unnamed class indexer would have implied a very wrong context since script fragments are only part of the configuration.
If indexed properties were available in C# I could have implemented the below code (syntax is this[key] changed to PropertyName[key]).
public interface IConfig
{
// Other configuration properties removed for examp[le
/// <summary>
/// Script fragments
/// </summary>
string Scripts[string name] { get; set; }
}
/// <summary>
/// Class to handle loading and saving the application's configuration.
/// </summary>
internal class Config : IConfig, IXmlConfig
{
#region Application Configuraiton Settings
// Other configuration properties removed for examp[le
/// <summary>
/// Script fragments
/// </summary>
public string Scripts[string name]
{
get
{
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(name))
{
string script;
if (_scripts.TryGetValue(name.Trim().ToLower(), out script))
return script;
}
return string.Empty;
}
set
{
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(name))
{
_scripts[name.Trim().ToLower()] = value;
OnAppConfigChanged();
}
}
}
private readonly Dictionary<string, string> _scripts = new Dictionary<string, string>();
#endregion
/// <summary>
/// Clears configuration settings, but does not clear internal configuration meta-data.
/// </summary>
private void ClearConfig()
{
// Other properties removed for example
_scripts.Clear();
}
#region IXmlConfig
void IXmlConfig.XmlSaveTo(int configVersion, XElement appElement)
{
Debug.Assert(configVersion == 2);
Debug.Assert(appElement != null);
// Saving of other properties removed for example
if (_scripts.Count > 0)
{
var scripts = new XElement("Scripts");
foreach (var kvp in _scripts)
{
var scriptElement = new XElement(kvp.Key, kvp.Value);
scripts.Add(scriptElement);
}
appElement.Add(scripts);
}
}
void IXmlConfig.XmlLoadFrom(int configVersion, XElement appElement)
{
// Implementation simplified for example
Debug.Assert(appElement != null);
ClearConfig();
if (configVersion == 2)
{
// Loading of other configuration properites removed for example
var scripts = appElement.Element("Scripts");
if (scripts != null)
foreach (var script in scripts.Elements())
_scripts[script.Name.ToString()] = script.Value;
}
else
throw new ApplicaitonException("Unknown configuration file version " + configVersion);
}
#endregion
}
Unfortunately indexed properties are not implemented so I implemented a class to store them and provided access to that. This is an undesirable implementation because the purpose of the configuration class in this domain model is to encapsulate all the details. Clients of this class will be accessing specific script fragments by name and have no reason to count or enumerate over them.
I could have implemented this as:
public string ScriptGet(string name)
public void ScriptSet(string name, string value)
Which I probably should have, but this is a useful illustration of why using indexed classes as a replacement for this missing feature is often not a reasonable substitute.
To implement similar capability as an indexed property I had to write the below code which you'll notice is considerably longer, more complex and thus harder to read, understand and maintain.
public interface IConfig
{
// Other configuration properties removed for examp[le
/// <summary>
/// Script fragments
/// </summary>
ScriptsCollection Scripts { get; }
}
/// <summary>
/// Class to handle loading and saving the application's configuration.
/// </summary>
internal class Config : IConfig, IXmlConfig
{
public Config()
{
_scripts = new ScriptsCollection();
_scripts.ScriptChanged += ScriptChanged;
}
#region Application Configuraiton Settings
// Other configuration properties removed for examp[le
/// <summary>
/// Script fragments
/// </summary>
public ScriptsCollection Scripts
{ get { return _scripts; } }
private readonly ScriptsCollection _scripts;
private void ScriptChanged(object sender, ScriptChangedEventArgs e)
{
OnAppConfigChanged();
}
#endregion
/// <summary>
/// Clears configuration settings, but does not clear internal configuration meta-data.
/// </summary>
private void ClearConfig()
{
// Other properties removed for example
_scripts.Clear();
}
#region IXmlConfig
void IXmlConfig.XmlSaveTo(int configVersion, XElement appElement)
{
Debug.Assert(configVersion == 2);
Debug.Assert(appElement != null);
// Saving of other properties removed for example
if (_scripts.Count > 0)
{
var scripts = new XElement("Scripts");
foreach (var kvp in _scripts)
{
var scriptElement = new XElement(kvp.Key, kvp.Value);
scripts.Add(scriptElement);
}
appElement.Add(scripts);
}
}
void IXmlConfig.XmlLoadFrom(int configVersion, XElement appElement)
{
// Implementation simplified for example
Debug.Assert(appElement != null);
ClearConfig();
if (configVersion == 2)
{
// Loading of other configuration properites removed for example
var scripts = appElement.Element("Scripts");
if (scripts != null)
foreach (var script in scripts.Elements())
_scripts[script.Name.ToString()] = script.Value;
}
else
throw new ApplicaitonException("Unknown configuration file version " + configVersion);
}
#endregion
}
public class ScriptsCollection : IEnumerable<KeyValuePair<string, string>>
{
private readonly Dictionary<string, string> Scripts = new Dictionary<string, string>();
public string this[string name]
{
get
{
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(name))
{
string script;
if (Scripts.TryGetValue(name.Trim().ToLower(), out script))
return script;
}
return string.Empty;
}
set
{
if (!string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(name))
Scripts[name.Trim().ToLower()] = value;
}
}
public void Clear()
{
Scripts.Clear();
}
public int Count
{
get { return Scripts.Count; }
}
public event EventHandler<ScriptChangedEventArgs> ScriptChanged;
protected void OnScriptChanged(string name)
{
if (ScriptChanged != null)
{
var script = this[name];
ScriptChanged.Invoke(this, new ScriptChangedEventArgs(name, script));
}
}
#region IEnumerable
public IEnumerator<KeyValuePair<string, string>> GetEnumerator()
{
return Scripts.GetEnumerator();
}
IEnumerator IEnumerable.GetEnumerator()
{
return GetEnumerator();
}
#endregion
}
public class ScriptChangedEventArgs : EventArgs
{
public string Name { get; set; }
public string Script { get; set; }
public ScriptChangedEventArgs(string name, string script)
{
Name = name;
Script = script;
}
}