I am completely new to async/await and have been "improving" a totally synchronous app I wrote two years ago. I have the following situation that I am unhappy with my solution.
The XAML is bound to the following two classes:
XAML
private InsuranceEditor _primaryinsurance;
public InsuranceEditor PrimaryInsurance
{
get { return _primaryinsurance; }
set { if (_primaryinsurance == value) return; _primaryinsurance = value; OnPropertyChanged("PrimaryInsurance"); }
}
private InsuranceEditor _secondaryinsurance;
public InsuranceEditor SecondaryInsurance
{
get { return _secondaryinsurance; }
set { if (_secondaryinsurance == value) return; _secondaryinsurance = value; OnPropertyChanged("SecondaryInsurance"); }
}
The classes, PrimaryInsurance, and SecondaryInsurance inherit from the abstract class Insurance:
abstract class InsuranceEditor : SimpleViewModelBase, ISave, IDataErrorInfo
{
.................
// Constructor
public InsuranceEditor(PatientDemographicsEditor patient, Billing service)
{
...
}
Factory pattern used for asynchronous construction of PrimaryInsurance (Async OOP Constructor)
private async Task<PrimaryInsurance> InitializeAsync()
{
// asyncData = await GetDataAsync();
return this;
}
public static Task<PrimaryInsurance> Create(PatientDemographicsEditor patient, Billing service)
{
var ret = new PrimaryInsurance(patient, service);
return ret.InitializeAsync();
}
// Constructor
private PrimaryInsurance(PatientDemographicsEditor patient, Billing service)
: base(patient, service)
{
Editor_Id = 1;
........
}
class SecondaryInsurance : InsuranceEditor
{
// Constructor
private SecondaryInsurance(PatientDemographicsEditor patient, Billing service)
: base(patient, service)
{
Editor_Id = 2;
............................
}
}
Logically, both primary and secondary insurance only differ in their Editor_Id
, so it seemed natural to inherit from a common InsuranceEditor
. The problem now comes with "correctly" applying async/await to the Primary and Secondary Insurance. I would like usage to be something like:
PrimaryInsurance = await PrimaryInsurance.Create(....)
where Create(...)
is recognized as a static method of PrimaryInsurance
(not necessarily a static method of the abstract class InsuranceEditor
.)
Can this be done?
Edit #1. After posting this question, I'm thinking it may have already been asked, What's the correct alternative to static method inheritance? and that what I want can't be done in C#. Is this correct?
Edit #2: The problem I am having in VS comes with the usage statement:
PrimaryInsurance = await PrimaryInsurance.Create(Patient, BILLING);
VS tells me that:
Member 'InsuranceEditor.Create(PatientDemographicsEditor, Billing)' cannot be accessed with an instance reference; qualify it with a type name instead
And then if I allow VS to make the Create(...) (so that there are no errors), it makes this in the abstact InsuranceEditor class, not the PrimaryInsurance Class.
internal Task<InsuranceEditor> Create(PatientDemographicsEditor patient, Billing bILLING)
{
throw new NotImplementedException();
}
What am I doing wrong?
Editor_Id
why not just use one class and pass in the Editor_Id as a parameter to a private constructor? Then you just doawait InsuranceEditor.CreatePrimary(...)
orawait InsuranceEditor.CreateSecondary(...)
BaseClass.Create()
not justCreate()
. With instance methods you can callCreate()
in the child class because it is also an instance ofBaseClass
and so it has the same public and protected instance members available, but the static members are bound to the type (think of aType
object kinda) not the instances of that type.class A { public static void M() { } }
andclass B : A { }
, you can callB.M();
. TheM()
method declared inA
absolutely is a valid static member ofB
and can be referred to as such.