97

What I want to do is something like this: I have enums with combined flagged values.

public static class EnumExtension
{
    public static bool IsSet<T>( this T input, T matchTo ) 
        where T:enum //the constraint I want that doesn't exist in C#3
    {    
        return (input & matchTo) != 0;
    }
}

So then I could do:

MyEnum tester = MyEnum.FlagA | MyEnum.FlagB

if( tester.IsSet( MyEnum.FlagA ) )
    //act on flag a

Unfortunately, C#'s generic where constraints have no enum restriction, only class and struct. C# doesn't see enums as structs (even though they are value types) so I can't add extension types like this.

Does anyone know a workaround?

6
  • 2
    Keith: download version 0.0.0.2 of UnconstrainedMelody - I've implemented HasAll and HasAny. Enjoy.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 11, 2009 at 21:22
  • What do you mean by “C# doesn't see enums as structs”? You can use enum types as type parameters that are constrained to struct just fine.
    – Timwi
    Sep 25, 2010 at 19:38
  • check this article here: codeproject.com/KB/cs/ExtendEnum.aspx 'IsValidEnumValue' or 'IsFlagsEnumDefined' methods are probably the answer to your question. Jul 1, 2011 at 14:44
  • @dmihailescu - see @Jon Skeet's far more complete and detailed solution in the accepted answer.
    – Keith
    Jul 4, 2011 at 8:44
  • 11
    C# 7.3 introduces enum constraints. Apr 10, 2018 at 12:02

12 Answers 12

52

EDIT: This is now live in version 0.0.0.2 of UnconstrainedMelody.

(As requested on my blog post about enum constraints. I've included the basic facts below for the sake of a standalone answer.)

The best solution is to wait for me to include it in UnconstrainedMelody1. This is a library which takes C# code with "fake" constraints such as

where T : struct, IEnumConstraint

and turns it into

where T : struct, System.Enum

via a postbuild step.

It shouldn't be too hard to write IsSet... although catering for both Int64-based and UInt64-based flags could be the tricky part. (I smell some helper methods coming on, basically allowing me to treat any flags enum as if it had a base type of UInt64.)

What would you want the behaviour to be if you called

tester.IsSet(MyFlags.A | MyFlags.C)

? Should it check that all the specified flags are set? That would be my expectation.

I'll try to do this on the way home tonight... I'm hoping to have a quick blitz on useful enum methods to get the library up to a usable standard quickly, then relax a bit.

EDIT: I'm not sure about IsSet as a name, by the way. Options:

  • Includes
  • Contains
  • HasFlag (or HasFlags)
  • IsSet (it's certainly an option)

Thoughts welcome. I'm sure it'll be a while before anything's set in stone anyway...


1 or submit it as a patch, of course...

10
  • 1
    You had to go and mention PostSharp LOL :o postsharp.org/blog/generic-constraints-for-enums-and-delegates Sep 11, 2009 at 9:34
  • 1
    Or actually simpler HasAny() and HasAll()
    – Keith
    Sep 11, 2009 at 10:39
  • 1
    Yes, I agree that's even better. colors.HasAny(Colors.Red | Colors.Blue) looks like very readable code. =)
    – Blixt
    Sep 11, 2009 at 10:49
  • 1
    Yup, I like HasAny and HasAll too. Will go with that.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 11, 2009 at 10:56
  • 6
    Since C# 7.3 (released May 2018), it is possible to use the constraint where T : System.Enum. This was already written elsewhere in the thread; just thought I would repeat it here. May 29, 2018 at 10:00
37

As of C# 7.3, there is now a built-in way to add enum constraints:

public class UsingEnum<T> where T : System.Enum { }

source: https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/language-reference/keywords/where-generic-type-constraint

5
  • Do consider where T : struct, System.Enum. Jun 11, 2022 at 11:33
  • @JeppeStigNielsen, while it will work like that as well, it's not adding any value. All enums (and only enums) implement System.Enum. All enums (but not only enums) are also struct. Adding both will cover only enums. Using only System.Enum will do that as well... Jun 13, 2022 at 7:27
  • 1
    It only makes a difference because System.Enum itself is a reference type which also meets your version of the constraint, but not mine. This makes a difference with nullable support, among other things. For example, if you use T? somewhere in your class, let us say a property public T? Value { get; set; } then it makes a big difference if the compiler knows whether it is a value type or not. Also without any ?, if you do public bool IsNull(T t) => t == null;, with my version of the constraint the compiler can emit a warning that t is never null. Jun 13, 2022 at 7:59
  • It really depends on how you want to use this class. In most real-case scenarios, you wouldn't have a need for struct. With public T? Value { get; set; }, if you're using nullable reference types, the only actual difference would be that you would need to compare Value to null instead of using .HasValue. As for public bool IsNull(T t) => t == null;, why would you even have it if you're working with enums? It would only make sense to use public bool IsNull(T? t) => t == null; Jun 13, 2022 at 11:04
  • Well, that's what I'm saying. It depends on what you want out of it. The question is not asking for nullable enums and only that need would require an additional struct constraint. The question as it stands doesn't need it. Jun 13, 2022 at 15:32
17

Darren, that would work if the types were specific enumerations - for general enumerations to work you have to cast them to ints (or more likely uint) to do the boolean math:

public static bool IsSet( this Enum input, Enum matchTo )
{
    return ( Convert.ToUInt32( input ) & Convert.ToUInt32( matchTo ) ) != 0;
}
3
  • 1
    And if you have a ridiculous number of flags, you can call GetTypeCode() on the arguments and Convert.ToUint64()
    – Kit
    Sep 10, 2009 at 2:42
  • Awesome, the combination of 'Enum` and Convert.ToUInt32 I didn't find anywhere else. AFAIK, Its the only decent Pre-Net-4 solution that also works in VB. BTW, if matchTo might have multiple flag bits, then replace != 0 with == Convert.ToUInt32(matchTo). Mar 19, 2014 at 6:56
  • 1
    Note that Convert.ToUInt32 used with an enum will use the Convert.ToUInt32(object) overload, meaning that CLR will first box these values before passing then to the ToUInt32 method. In most cases this won't matter, but it's good to know that you'll keep the GC rather busy if you're using something like this to parse millions of enums per second.
    – vgru
    Dec 18, 2014 at 15:08
11

As of C# 7.3, you can use the Enum constraint on generic types:

public static TEnum Parse<TEnum>(string value) where TEnum : Enum
{
    return (TEnum) Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), value);
}

If you want to use a Nullable enum, you must leave the orginial struct constraint:

public static TEnum? TryParse<TEnum>(string value) where TEnum : struct, Enum
{
    if( Enum.TryParse(value, out TEnum res) )
        return res;
    else
        return null;
}
10

Actually, it is possible, with an ugly trick. However, it cannot be used for extension methods.

public abstract class Enums<Temp> where Temp : class {
    public static TEnum Parse<TEnum>(string name) where TEnum : struct, Temp {
        return (TEnum)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), name); 
    }
}
public abstract class Enums : Enums<Enum> { }

Enums.IsSet<DateTimeKind>("Local")

If you want to, you can give Enums<Temp> a private constructor and a public nested abstract inherited class with Temp as Enum, to prevent inherited versions for non-enums.

8

You can achieve this using IL Weaving and ExtraConstraints

Allows you to write this code

public class Sample
{
    public void MethodWithDelegateConstraint<[DelegateConstraint] T> ()
    {        
    }
    public void MethodWithEnumConstraint<[EnumConstraint] T>()
    {
    }
}

What gets compiled

public class Sample
{
    public void MethodWithDelegateConstraint<T>() where T: Delegate
    {
    }

    public void MethodWithEnumConstraint<T>() where T: struct, Enum
    {
    }
}
0
4

This doesn't answer the original question, but there is now a method in .NET 4 called Enum.HasFlag which does what you are trying to do in your example

2
  • Upvoted because at this point, most everyone should be using .NET 4 (or higher) and so they should be using this method instead of trying to hack it together.
    – CptRobby
    Nov 20, 2014 at 20:01
  • Upvoted. However their solution uses boxing of the argument flag. .NET 4.0 is five years old now. Apr 19, 2015 at 8:57
3

The way I do it is put a struct constraint, then check that T is an enum at runtime. This doesn't eliminate the problem completely, but it does reduce it somewhat

1
  • 7
    where T : struct, IComparable, IFormattable, IConvertible -- this is the closest you can get to enum :)
    – Kit
    Sep 10, 2009 at 2:39
1

Using your original code, inside the method you can also use reflection to test that T is an enum:

public static class EnumExtension
{
    public static bool IsSet<T>( this T input, T matchTo )
    {
        if (!typeof(T).IsEnum)
        {
            throw new ArgumentException("Must be an enum", "input");
        }
        return (input & matchTo) != 0;
    }
}
1
  • 2
    Thanks, but that turns a compile time issue (the where constraint) into a runtime one (your exception). Also you'd still need to convert the inputs to ints before you could do anything with them.
    – Keith
    Sep 11, 2009 at 11:13
1

Here's some code that I just did up that seems to work like you want without having to do anything too crazy. It's not restricted to only enums set as Flags, but there could always be a check put in if need be.

public static class EnumExtensions
{
    public static bool ContainsFlag(this Enum source, Enum flag)
    {
        var sourceValue = ToUInt64(source);
        var flagValue = ToUInt64(flag);

        return (sourceValue & flagValue) == flagValue;
    }

    public static bool ContainsAnyFlag(this Enum source, params Enum[] flags)
    {
        var sourceValue = ToUInt64(source);

        foreach (var flag in flags)
        {
            var flagValue = ToUInt64(flag);

            if ((sourceValue & flagValue) == flagValue)
            {
                return true;
            }
        }

        return false;
    }

    // found in the Enum class as an internal method
    private static ulong ToUInt64(object value)
    {
        switch (Convert.GetTypeCode(value))
        {
            case TypeCode.SByte:
            case TypeCode.Int16:
            case TypeCode.Int32:
            case TypeCode.Int64:
                return (ulong)Convert.ToInt64(value, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);

            case TypeCode.Byte:
            case TypeCode.UInt16:
            case TypeCode.UInt32:
            case TypeCode.UInt64:
                return Convert.ToUInt64(value, CultureInfo.InvariantCulture);
        }

        throw new InvalidOperationException("Unknown enum type.");
    }
}
0

if someone needs generic IsSet (created out of box on fly could be improved on), and or string to Enum onfly conversion (which uses EnumConstraint presented below):

  public class TestClass
  { }

  public struct TestStruct
  { }

  public enum TestEnum
  {
    e1,    
    e2,
    e3
  }

  public static class TestEnumConstraintExtenssion
  {

    public static bool IsSet<TEnum>(this TEnum _this, TEnum flag)
      where TEnum : struct
    {
      return (((uint)Convert.ChangeType(_this, typeof(uint))) & ((uint)Convert.ChangeType(flag, typeof(uint)))) == ((uint)Convert.ChangeType(flag, typeof(uint)));
    }

    //public static TestClass ToTestClass(this string _this)
    //{
    //  // #generates compile error  (so no missuse)
    //  return EnumConstraint.TryParse<TestClass>(_this);
    //}

    //public static TestStruct ToTestStruct(this string _this)
    //{
    //  // #generates compile error  (so no missuse)
    //  return EnumConstraint.TryParse<TestStruct>(_this);
    //}

    public static TestEnum ToTestEnum(this string _this)
    {
      // #enum type works just fine (coding constraint to Enum type)
      return EnumConstraint.TryParse<TestEnum>(_this);
    }

    public static void TestAll()
    {
      TestEnum t1 = "e3".ToTestEnum();
      TestEnum t2 = "e2".ToTestEnum();
      TestEnum t3 = "non existing".ToTestEnum(); // default(TestEnum) for non existing 

      bool b1 = t3.IsSet(TestEnum.e1); // you can ommit type
      bool b2 = t3.IsSet<TestEnum>(TestEnum.e2); // you can specify explicite type

      TestStruct t;
      // #generates compile error (so no missuse)
      //bool b3 = t.IsSet<TestEnum>(TestEnum.e1);

    }

  }

If someone still needs example hot to create Enum coding constraint:

using System;

/// <summary>
/// would be same as EnumConstraint_T&lt;Enum>Parse&lt;EnumType>("Normal"),
/// but writen like this it abuses constrain inheritence on System.Enum.
/// </summary>
public class EnumConstraint : EnumConstraint_T<Enum>
{

}

/// <summary>
/// provides ability to constrain TEnum to System.Enum abusing constrain inheritence
/// </summary>
/// <typeparam name="TClass">should be System.Enum</typeparam>
public abstract class EnumConstraint_T<TClass>
  where TClass : class
{

  public static TEnum Parse<TEnum>(string value)
    where TEnum : TClass
  {
    return (TEnum)Enum.Parse(typeof(TEnum), value);
  }

  public static bool TryParse<TEnum>(string value, out TEnum evalue)
    where TEnum : struct, TClass // struct is required to ignore non nullable type error
  {
    evalue = default(TEnum);
    return Enum.TryParse<TEnum>(value, out evalue);
  }

  public static TEnum TryParse<TEnum>(string value, TEnum defaultValue = default(TEnum))
    where TEnum : struct, TClass // struct is required to ignore non nullable type error
  {    
    Enum.TryParse<TEnum>(value, out defaultValue);
    return defaultValue;
  }

  public static TEnum Parse<TEnum>(string value, TEnum defaultValue = default(TEnum))
    where TEnum : struct, TClass // struct is required to ignore non nullable type error
  {
    TEnum result;
    if (Enum.TryParse<TEnum>(value, out result))
      return result;
    return defaultValue;
  }

  public static TEnum Parse<TEnum>(ushort value)
  {
    return (TEnum)(object)value;
  }

  public static sbyte to_i1<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (sbyte)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(sbyte));
  }

  public static byte to_u1<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (byte)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(byte));
  }

  public static short to_i2<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (short)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(short));
  }

  public static ushort to_u2<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (ushort)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(ushort));
  }

  public static int to_i4<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (int)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(int));
  }

  public static uint to_u4<TEnum>(TEnum value)
  {
    return (uint)(object)Convert.ChangeType(value, typeof(uint));
  }

}

hope this helps someone.

0

I just wanted to add Enum as a generic constraint.

While this is just for a tiny helper method using ExtraConstraints is a bit too much overhead for me.

I decided to just just create a struct constraint and add a runtime check for IsEnum. For converting a variable from T to Enum I cast it to object first.

    public static Converter<T, string> CreateConverter<T>() where T : struct
    {
        if (!typeof(T).IsEnum) throw new ArgumentException("Given Type is not an Enum");
        return new Converter<T, string>(x => ((Enum)(object)x).GetEnumDescription());
    }

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