41

The () seems silly. is there a better way?

For example:

ExternalId.IfNotNullDo(() => ExternalId = ExternalId.Trim());

4 Answers 4

44

Sort of! There is a new idiom in town, that is nice and may help you in some cases. It is not fully what you want, but sometimes I think you will like it.

Since underscore ("_") is a valid C# identifier, it is becoming a common idiom to use it as a parameter name to a lambda in cases where you plan to ignore the parameter anyway. If other coders are aware of the idiom, they will know immediately that the parameter is irrelevant.

For example:

ExternalId.IfNotNullDo( _ => ExternalId=ExternalId.Trim());

Easy to type, conveys your intent, and easier on the eyes as well.

Of course, if you're passing your lambda to something that expects an expression tree, this may not work, because now you're passing a one-parameter lambda instead of a no-parameter lambda.

But for many cases, it is a nice solution.

23
  • 47
    I really don't see how this is better than (). Swapping slightly ugly syntax for slightly ugly pseudo-syntax doesn't seem like a win.
    – Greg Beech
    Mar 25, 2009 at 8:35
  • 5
    Well, you're definitely welcome to your opinion. It is a subjective matter. But to me it greatly reduces visual clutter, is easier to read, and is easier to type. The original question was motivated by a dislike of the () syntax, so this presents an alternative. Mar 25, 2009 at 9:28
  • 4
    In F#, _ is a matchall pattern, so it's nice having similarity when having to use C#. Many of my event handlers look like "foo += (,_) ...".
    – MichaelGG
    Mar 29, 2009 at 20:51
  • 7
    A one-parameter lambda is a priest, a two-parameter lambda is a beast. But I will bet a striped pajama, you've never seen a three-parameter lambda.
    – Dan J
    Nov 16, 2010 at 17:33
  • 4
    I have to agree with @Greg; it doesn't look any better than (). Besides, it doesn't answer the question as the underscore approach won't work for parameterless lambdas. If I plan to ignore the parameters, I ignore the parameters by using a delegate { ... } (see Mark's answer). Jul 5, 2011 at 15:31
26

For a lambda, no: you need () =>

Is it for a delegate or an expression? For delegates, another option is delegate {...}. This may or may not be desirable, depending on the scenario. It is more keys, certainly...

In some cases (not this one) you can use a target method directly - i.e.

ExternalId.IfNotNullDo(SomeMethod);
19

No, there isn't. Lambda expressions are optimised (in terms of syntax) for the single parameter case.

I know that the C# team feels your pain, and have tried to find an alternative. Whether there ever will be one or not is a different matter.

1
  • 10
    @aateeque: I don't think it answers the question at all. It gives an idea of how to write a lambda expression with one parameter that you plan to ignore, but that's not the same as a parameterless lambda.
    – Jon Skeet
    May 27, 2013 at 8:25
-1

Essentially what you're looking for is the inverse of the ?? null coalescing operator (which is called Nullable<T>.GetValueOrDefault() under the covers) - problem is C# doesn't provide a neat OOTB answer.

Don't know exactly what you're doing but as you are doing:

ExternalId.IfNotNullDo(()=>ExternalId=ExternalId.Trim());

you might also find a use for:

class NullExtensions
{
    public T DefaultOr<T>( this T that, Func<T> transform)
    {
        return that!=default(T) ? transform(that) : default(T);
    }
}

which would enable:

var result = input.DefaultOr( _ => _.Trim());

(in general, I'd be trying to steer away from reusing / mutating variables as you seem to be doing and instead going in an Introduce Explaining Variable / Split Temporary Variable direction i.e., use a new variable rather than value = value.DefaultOr( _ => _.Trim());)

4
  • 4
    The question is about lambda syntax, not the actual null check. Nov 8, 2011 at 12:28
  • 4
    @brendanjerwin: There should be a Badge for a 3 year delayed Correct downvote :D - guilty as charged. You suggesting a delete or just want a big fat zero beside an irrrelevant answer? Nov 8, 2011 at 15:17
  • How about 7 years? :)
    – Marc L.
    May 9, 2016 at 17:37
  • 2
    @Mark L :D Well we can now summarise my post as: how about ?. ? Reading the answers, I'll keep this here as a marker to see how long it takes for the accepted answer to become unaccepted... May 9, 2016 at 22:25

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