478
votes

Let's make a list of answers where you post your excellent and favorite extension methods.

The requirement is that the full code must be posted and a example and an explanation on how to use it.

Based on the high interest in this topic I have setup an Open Source Project called extensionoverflow on Codeplex.

Please mark your answers with an acceptance to put the code in the Codeplex project.

Please post the full sourcecode and not a link.

Codeplex News:

24.08.2010 The Codeplex page is now here: http://extensionoverflow.codeplex.com/

11.11.2008 XmlSerialize / XmlDeserialize is now Implemented and Unit Tested.

11.11.2008 There is still room for more developers. ;-) Join NOW!

11.11.2008 Third contributer joined ExtensionOverflow, welcome to BKristensen

11.11.2008 FormatWith is now Implemented and Unit Tested.

09.11.2008 Second contributer joined ExtensionOverflow. welcome to chakrit.

09.11.2008 We need more developers. ;-)

09.11.2008 ThrowIfArgumentIsNull in now Implemented and Unit Tested on Codeplex.

4
  • Now the first code is committed to the Codeplex site.
    – bovium
    Nov 7, 2008 at 20:13
  • Erik unfortunately everything is started now on codeplex. Please join anyway.
    – bovium
    Nov 11, 2008 at 22:43
  • 3
    Looks pretty good. I do have a comment about naming the static classes. Naming them <type>Extensions isn't very informative. For example StringExtensions holds both formatting and xml stuff. I think it's better to name the class with why you're extending that type. For example UnixDateTimeConversions. You can reasonably guess it holds methods for converting to and from Unix time. Just a thought!
    – ecoffey
    Aug 26, 2010 at 15:56
  • Check this URL for more about C# Extension Methods planetofcoders.com/c-extension-methods Mar 9, 2012 at 5:59

150 Answers 150

1
2 3 4 5
232
votes
public static bool In<T>(this T source, params T[] list)
{
  if(null==source) throw new ArgumentNullException("source");
  return list.Contains(source);
}

Allows me to replace:

if(reallyLongIntegerVariableName == 1 || 
    reallyLongIntegerVariableName == 6 || 
    reallyLongIntegerVariableName == 9 || 
    reallyLongIntegerVariableName == 11)
{
  // do something....
}

and

if(reallyLongStringVariableName == "string1" || 
    reallyLongStringVariableName == "string2" || 
    reallyLongStringVariableName == "string3")
{
  // do something....
}

and

if(reallyLongMethodParameterName == SomeEnum.Value1 || 
    reallyLongMethodParameterName == SomeEnum.Value2 || 
    reallyLongMethodParameterName == SomeEnum.Value3 || 
    reallyLongMethodParameterName == SomeEnum.Value4)
{
  // do something....
}

With:

if(reallyLongIntegerVariableName.In(1,6,9,11))
{
      // do something....
}

and

if(reallyLongStringVariableName.In("string1","string2","string3"))
{
      // do something....
}

and

if(reallyLongMethodParameterName.In(SomeEnum.Value1, SomeEnum.Value2, SomeEnum.Value3, SomeEnum.Value4)
{
  // do something....
}
12
  • 2
    Well it compiles if you're using System.Linq;
    – Ryu
    Nov 18, 2009 at 1:48
  • 11
    Maybe "EqualsAnyOf" would be a better name than "In"? Jan 19, 2010 at 22:40
  • 10
    I'm not sure I like it - I like the brevity of In, but maybe IsIn would be better. Jan 20, 2010 at 8:31
  • 50
    Using the same Contains method: (new[] { 1, 2, 3 }).Contains(a)
    – Max Toro
    Feb 5, 2010 at 14:46
  • 4
    I thought of In<T>(...) as well and found it to be the most useful extension method outside of the standard library. But I am at odds with the name In. A method name is supposed to be describing what it does, but In doesn't do so. I've called it IsAnyOf<T>(...), but I guess IsIn<T>(...) would be adequate as well.
    – JBSnorro
    Aug 19, 2011 at 0:41
160
votes

I have various extension methods in my MiscUtil project (full source is available there - I'm not going to repeat it here). My favourites, some of which involve other classes (such as ranges):

Date and time stuff - mostly for unit tests. Not sure I'd use them in production :)

var birthday = 19.June(1976);
var workingDay = 7.Hours() + 30.Minutes();

Ranges and stepping - massive thanks to Marc Gravell for his operator stuff to make this possible:

var evenNaturals = 2.To(int.MaxValue).Step(2);
var daysSinceBirth = birthday.To(DateTime.Today).Step(1.Days());

Comparisons:

var myComparer = ProjectionComparer.Create(Person p => p.Name);
var next = myComparer.ThenBy(p => p.Age);
var reversed = myComparer.Reverse();

Argument checking:

x.ThrowIfNull("x");

LINQ to XML applied to anonymous types (or other types with appropriate properties):

// <Name>Jon</Name><Age>32</Age>
new { Name="Jon", Age=32}.ToXElements();
// Name="Jon" Age="32" (as XAttributes, obviously)
new { Name="Jon", Age=32}.ToXAttributes()

Push LINQ - would take too long to explain here, but search for it.

13
  • 1
    That's nice! You should put it up on Google Code or CodePlex so I can send you some patches :-) I promise it'll be readable :-P
    – chakrit
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:30
  • 3
    @bovium: You can already see the code. Follow the link in the first sentence - full source is there.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 7, 2008 at 19:11
  • 1
    @bovium: I'd rather do it myself, putting it on code.google.com and manage the project myself, if you don't mind. Obviously you're within the licence to put it on Codeplex if you keep the appropriate attribution, but I'd rather sort it out myself soon unless you're desperate :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 8, 2008 at 20:16
  • 1
    @Jon Skeet. Its put under the MIT license free of use for everybody. Commercially or open source. Why not join forces and make an extension methods library for the public.
    – bovium
    Nov 8, 2008 at 21:47
  • 1
    Just because I do lots of other bits and pieces in that library. You're welcome to take a copy of it all for your project, but I'd rather keep one copy in my own project too.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 9, 2008 at 8:38
147
votes

string.Format shortcut:

public static class StringExtensions
{
    // Enable quick and more natural string.Format calls
    public static string F(this string s, params object[] args)
    {
        return string.Format(s, args);
    }
}

Example:

var s = "The co-ordinate is ({0}, {1})".F(point.X, point.Y);

For quick copy-and-paste go here.

Don't you find it more natural to type "some string".F("param") instead of string.Format("some string", "param") ?

For a more readable name, try one of these suggestion:

s = "Hello {0} world {1}!".Fmt("Stack", "Overflow");
s = "Hello {0} world {1}!".FormatBy("Stack", "Overflow");
s = "Hello {0} world {1}!".FormatWith("Stack", "Overflow");
s = "Hello {0} world {1}!".Display("Stack", "Overflow");
s = "Hello {0} world {1}!".With("Stack", "Overflow");

..

20
  • 11
    It's certainly short - but will be unreadable to any new members of your team.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:15
  • 3
    I think readability matters more in the grander scheme of your code than a few shorthand statements that could be quickly looked up/asked.
    – chakrit
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:23
  • 6
    Personally I'd like a separate Formatter object, which the BCL could parse the pattern of once and reuse. That would increase readability and performance. I've asked the BCL team - we'll see...
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:25
  • 3
    It's an extension method, of course it's going to be unreadable to new members of the team. I thought that was the idea with this witty stuff? How else will the new members know how clever we are?
    – MarkJ
    Feb 28, 2009 at 9:13
  • 17
    Ok... I just went to put this into action and went with .With -- so you get "This is a {0}".With("test") and it's very readable and makes sense. FYI
    – klkitchens
    Mar 4, 2009 at 13:49
89
votes

Are these any use?

public static bool CoinToss(this Random rng)
{
    return rng.Next(2) == 0;
}

public static T OneOf<T>(this Random rng, params T[] things)
{
    return things[rng.Next(things.Length)];
}

Random rand;
bool luckyDay = rand.CoinToss();
string babyName = rand.OneOf("John", "George", "Radio XBR74 ROCKS!");
3
  • this mimicks pythons random.choice(seq) function. nice. Dec 3, 2009 at 14:04
  • 6
    Couple things: I'd recommend that OneOf should accept any IList<T>. Then you could always also have an overload that takes a params arg and just passes that into the IList<T> overload. I gave an answer (way down at the bottom right now) with a NextBool method similar to your CoinToss, but with an overload that takes a probability parameter (what if I want something to happen 75% of the time?). Also, just a nit pick: your example code will throw a NullReferenceException since rand is never initialized.
    – Dan Tao
    Mar 13, 2010 at 21:13
  • 3
    +1 I really like this, but I prefer CoinToss to be implemented with rng.NextDouble() < .5 because internally .Next(int) is made with .NextDouble() so you would save a cast, a * and a check. Sep 30, 2010 at 21:15
76
votes
public static class ComparableExtensions
{
  public static bool Between<T>(this T actual, T lower, T upper) where T : IComparable<T>
  {
    return actual.CompareTo(lower) >= 0 && actual.CompareTo(upper) < 0;
  }
}

Example:

if (myNumber.Between(3,7))
{
  // ....
}
13
  • 19
    I love this one but I'm trying to decide if it's right to make the bounds check inclusive on the min value but exclusive on the max value. I wonder if that would be confusing. 5.Between(5,10) is true but 5.Between(1,5) is false. Not even sure that a companion Within method would help. Thougts? Nov 7, 2008 at 19:52
  • 12
    Wouldn't the name "IsBetween" make more sense? Also maybe make an IsBetweenInclusive and IsBetweenExclusive. No idea which one to take for default though.
    – fretje
    Jun 4, 2009 at 9:06
  • 2
    @Steve: it makes more sense if it were a datetime extension. Jun 9, 2009 at 17:06
  • 16
    To me between implies: 5.Between(5,10) returns false, and 10.Between(5,10) returns false as well. That just feels natural to me. Aug 16, 2009 at 9:13
  • 3
    It seems to me that multiple people have different ideas as to what is natural. Because of this it probably should be explicitly stated what is being used (ie Inclusive vs Exclusive), as this could be a very easy source of errors. Dec 1, 2009 at 3:55
58
votes

The extension method:

public static void AddRange<T, S>(this ICollection<T> list, params S[] values)
    where S : T
{
    foreach (S value in values)
        list.Add(value);
}

The method applies for all types and lets you add a range of items to a list as parameters.

Example:

var list = new List<Int32>();
list.AddRange(5, 4, 8, 4, 2);
11
  • 15
    Would be better as this IList<T>
    – user1228
    May 18, 2009 at 12:32
  • 21
    Just use collection initializer => var list = new List<int>{5,4,8,4,2}; Nov 2, 2009 at 18:58
  • Why not just calling List<T>.AddRange(IEnumerable<T> collection) within your method?
    – Rauhotz
    Mar 13, 2010 at 18:59
  • 8
    @Will: Actually, it would be best to accept an ICollection<T>; then it could also be used on, for example, LinkedList<T> and HashSet<T>, not just indexed collections.
    – Dan Tao
    Mar 13, 2010 at 21:15
  • 2
    Edited to allow covariance in pre-.net 4.0 Jun 2, 2010 at 15:42
55
votes

By all means put this in the codeplex project.

Serializing / Deserializing objects to XML:

/// <summary>Serializes an object of type T in to an xml string</summary>
/// <typeparam name="T">Any class type</typeparam>
/// <param name="obj">Object to serialize</param>
/// <returns>A string that represents Xml, empty otherwise</returns>
public static string XmlSerialize<T>(this T obj) where T : class, new()
{
    if (obj == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("obj");

    var serializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof(T));
    using (var writer = new StringWriter())
    {
        serializer.Serialize(writer, obj);
        return writer.ToString();
    }
}

/// <summary>Deserializes an xml string in to an object of Type T</summary>
/// <typeparam name="T">Any class type</typeparam>
/// <param name="xml">Xml as string to deserialize from</param>
/// <returns>A new object of type T is successful, null if failed</returns>
public static T XmlDeserialize<T>(this string xml) where T : class, new()
{
    if (xml == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("xml");

    var serializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof(T));
    using (var reader = new StringReader(xml))
    {
        try { return (T)serializer.Deserialize(reader); }
        catch { return null; } // Could not be deserialized to this type.
    }
}
13
  • 8
    I'd be tempted to call the first one ToXml() (like ToString())
    – Jay Bazuzi
    Jan 6, 2009 at 20:29
  • 1
    Apologies to the OP if he intentionally wrote it this way, but the use of MemoryStreams AND XmlReader/XmlWriter was overkill. The StringReader and StringWriter class are perfect for this operation.
    – Portman
    Jan 8, 2009 at 21:47
  • 2
    Beware, this is not threadsafe. You should definitely synchronize your access to the static serialisers dictionary. Jun 5, 2009 at 20:48
  • 2
    @Yann, @T, It's much easier if you just add the "thread static" attribute. Then a new cache will be created per thread. No need for synchronization. Nov 14, 2009 at 22:50
  • 1
    @Jonathan C Dickinson: It appears from the MSDN docs here msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… that the constructor that is used (new XmlSerializer(type)) does not have a memory leak problem. So maybe the caching code isn't needed?
    – slolife
    Aug 26, 2010 at 17:27
46
votes

ForEach for IEnumerables

public static class FrameworkExtensions
{
    // a map function
    public static void ForEach<T>(this IEnumerable<T> @enum, Action<T> mapFunction)
    {
        foreach (var item in @enum) mapFunction(item);
    }
}

Naive example:

var buttons = GetListOfButtons() as IEnumerable<Button>;

// click all buttons
buttons.ForEach(b => b.Click());

Cool example:

// no need to type the same assignment 3 times, just
// new[] up an array and use foreach + lambda
// everything is properly inferred by csc :-)
new { itemA, itemB, itemC }
    .ForEach(item => {
        item.Number = 1;
        item.Str = "Hello World!";
    });

Note:

This is not like Select because Select expects your function to return something as for transforming into another list.

ForEach simply allows you to execute something for each of the items without any transformations/data manipulation.

I made this so I can program in a more functional style and I was surprised that List has a ForEach while IEnumerable does not.

Put this in the codeplex project

11
  • 13
    Post on why LINQ's IEnumerable<T> extensions don't include a ForEach: stackoverflow.com/questions/317874/…
    – Neil
    Jun 9, 2009 at 16:50
  • 13
    I recommend reading this before using method: blogs.msdn.com/ericlippert/archive/2009/05/18/…
    – jpbochi
    Jan 6, 2010 at 20:50
  • 2
    @jpbochi: This is just Microsoft demagogy Oct 22, 2010 at 15:10
  • 1
    @abatishchev And your comment is just prejudice against Microsoft. It does not invalidade any word written by Eric. Someone's arguments are not made valid or invalid just because of the company he/she works for.
    – jpbochi
    Oct 25, 2010 at 15:44
  • 1
    By the way, let me make one point clear. I didn't say you should not use this ForEach extension method. I just said that you should consider the points that Eric exposed before you decide whether to use it or not. I read it and I decided not to use it. You're free to do whatever you want with your code.
    – jpbochi
    Oct 25, 2010 at 15:45
43
votes

My conversion extensions which allow you to do:

int i = myString.To<int>();

Here it is, as posted on TheSoftwareJedi.com

public static T To<T>(this IConvertible obj)
{
  return (T)Convert.ChangeType(obj, typeof(T));
}

public static T ToOrDefault<T>
             (this IConvertible obj)
{
    try
    {
        return To<T>(obj);
    }
    catch
    {
        return default(T);
    }
}

public static bool ToOrDefault<T>
                    (this IConvertible obj,
                     out T newObj)
{
    try
    {
        newObj = To<T>(obj); 
        return true;
    }
    catch
    {
        newObj = default(T); 
        return false;
    }
}

public static T ToOrOther<T>
                       (this IConvertible obj,
                       T other)
{
  try
  {
      return To<T>obj);
  }
  catch
  {
      return other;
  }
}

public static bool ToOrOther<T>
                         (this IConvertible obj,
                         out T newObj,
                         T other)
{
    try
    {
        newObj = To<T>(obj);
        return true;
    }
    catch
    {
        newObj = other;
        return false;
    }
}

public static T ToOrNull<T>
                      (this IConvertible obj)
                      where T : class
{
    try
    {
        return To<T>(obj);
    }
    catch
    {
        return null;
    }
}

public static bool ToOrNull<T>
                  (this IConvertible obj,
                  out T newObj)
                  where T : class
{
    try
    {
        newObj = To<T>(obj);
        return true;
    }
    catch
    {
        newObj = null;
        return false;
    }
}

You can ask for default (calls blank constructor or "0" for numerics) on failure, specify a "default" value (I call it "other"), or ask for null (where T : class). I've also provided both silent exception models, and a typical TryParse model that returns a bool indicating the action taken, and an out param holds the new value. So our code can do things like this

int i = myString.To<int>();
string a = myInt.ToOrDefault<string>();
//note type inference
DateTime d = myString.ToOrOther(DateTime.MAX_VALUE);
double d;
//note type inference
bool didItGiveDefault = myString.ToOrDefault(out d);
string s = myDateTime.ToOrNull<string>();

I couldn't get Nullable types to roll into the whole thing very cleanly. I tried for about 20 minutes before I threw in the towel.

5
  • 64
    Personally, i'm not a fan of code that does try / catch to determine the outcome. Try / catch should be used for errors that occur outside of the intended logic, IMO. hmmmmm
    – Pure.Krome
    Nov 9, 2008 at 12:49
  • If I didn't want you to use the code, I wouldn't have posted it! :) Nov 11, 2008 at 22:20
  • Finally something unseen. I like it. :) Nov 2, 2009 at 19:03
  • 8
    You should at least change that "catch" clause to only catch those exceptions that ChangeType() will raise when it cannot "convert" the reference. I think you wouldn't want to have any OutOfMemoryException, ExecutionEngineException, ThreadAbortException, or alike being treated as a conversion error. Those things will otherwise be pretty hard to track errors. Nov 22, 2009 at 18:17
  • 2
    I believe ToOrNull has the exact same behavior as ToOrDefault (i.e., if you call ToOrDefault on a reference type with an unsuccessful conversion, it will return null). But more importantly, it seems kind of redundant to me since var s = myObject as string accomplishes the same thing as var s = myObject.ToOrNull<string>() -- but without potentially having to catch an InvalidCastException. Am I missing something?
    – Dan Tao
    Mar 13, 2010 at 21:23
43
votes

I have an extension method for logging exceptions:

public static void Log(this Exception obj)
{
  //your logging logic here
}

And it is used like this:

try
{
    //Your stuff here
}
catch(Exception ex)
{
    ex.Log();
}

[sorry for posting twice; the 2nd one is better designed :-)]

2
  • 2
    Should read public static void Log(this Exception obj){} maybe?
    – Chris S
    Jan 28, 2009 at 17:03
  • I think this is good for BCL or 3rd party exceptions, but if you roll your own exception types, you can place logging in your base exception class. That way you don't have to remember to call Log().
    – si618
    Jun 4, 2010 at 6:13
38
votes
public static class StringExtensions {

    /// <summary>
    /// Parses a string into an Enum
    /// </summary>
    /// <typeparam name="T">The type of the Enum</typeparam>
    /// <param name="value">String value to parse</param>
    /// <returns>The Enum corresponding to the stringExtensions</returns>
    public static T EnumParse<T>(this string value) {
        return StringExtensions.EnumParse<T>(value, false);
    }

    public static T EnumParse<T>(this string value, bool ignorecase) {

        if (value == null) {
            throw new ArgumentNullException("value");
        }

        value = value.Trim();

        if (value.Length == 0) {
            throw new ArgumentException("Must specify valid information for parsing in the string.", "value");
        }

        Type t = typeof(T);

        if (!t.IsEnum) {
            throw new ArgumentException("Type provided must be an Enum.", "T");
        }

        return (T)Enum.Parse(t, value, ignorecase);
    }
}

Useful to parse a string into an Enum.

public enum TestEnum
{
    Bar,
    Test
}

public class Test
{
    public void Test()
    {
        TestEnum foo = "Test".EnumParse<TestEnum>();
    }
 }

Credit goes to Scott Dorman

--- Edit for Codeplex project ---

I have asked Scott Dorman if he would mind us publishing his code in the Codeplex project. This is the reply I got from him:

Thanks for the heads-up on both the SO post and the CodePlex project. I have upvoted your answer on the question. Yes, the code is effectively in the public domain currently under the CodeProject Open License (http://www.codeproject.com/info/cpol10.aspx).

I have no problems with this being included in the CodePlex project, and if you want to add me to the project (username is sdorman) I will add that method plus some additional enum helper methods.

5
  • This enum-parsing scenario comes up all the time... gotta put this in my lib :-)
    – chakrit
    Nov 9, 2008 at 15:33
  • Wow, I've been writing methods to map strings to enums (just started using .NET). Thanks, this will absolutely help!
    – Kevin
    Nov 13, 2008 at 1:29
  • 4
    You might also consider naming this ToEnum<>(), since it comes after the object.
    – Neil
    Nov 14, 2008 at 4:57
  • Note that Enum.TryParse<T> has been added to Net 4.0 - blogs.msdn.com/bclteam
    – Dan Diplo
    Nov 16, 2009 at 14:47
  • 1
    I don't think this method should use Trim. Trimming the input should be the responsibility of the caller. Oct 14, 2010 at 11:02
32
votes

I find this one pretty useful:

public static class PaulaBean
{
    private static String paula = "Brillant";
    public static String GetPaula<T>(this T obj) {
        return paula;
    }
}

You may use it on CodePlex.

2
  • 2
    Can someone be kind enough to explain it to the less gifted of us?
    – jpbochi
    Jan 6, 2010 at 21:06
  • hahaha Just read the article (Joel's comment above) - funny true, but having been in pretty much the same boat (on the recieving end, not the Paula end) it's only funny looking back! Once had a contractor brought in to work on a project I was designigner/lead dev on - she was not under my direct control, but was assigned work from my teams work list. Bosses lauded her as being brilliant (even hiring her again later as a Dev Lead!). It never dawned on them that every piece of code she wrote or designed had not made it to production and all had to be completely rewritten from scratch by my team!
    – Wolf5370
    May 2, 2012 at 6:14
31
votes

DateTimeExtensions

Examples:

DateTime firstDayOfMonth = DateTime.Now.First();
DateTime lastdayOfMonth = DateTime.Now.Last();
DateTime lastFridayInMonth = DateTime.Now.Last(DayOfWeek.Friday);
DateTime nextFriday = DateTime.Now.Next(DayOfWeek.Friday);
DateTime lunchTime = DateTime.Now.SetTime(11, 30);
DateTime noonOnFriday = DateTime.Now.Next(DayOfWeek.Friday).Noon();
DateTime secondMondayOfMonth = DateTime.Now.First(DayOfWeek.Monday).Next(DayOfWeek.Monday).Midnight();
4
  • 5
    I'd suggest renaming "SetTime" to "WithTime" as it's not actually setting it in the existing value. Nice otherwise though.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:26
  • 28
    DateTime.Now.First() - first what? It's only apparent from the sample code.
    – mackenir
    Nov 7, 2008 at 10:08
  • 2
    Very nice. But agree that the names could be a lot better.
    – bovium
    Nov 7, 2008 at 17:46
  • DateTime.Now.First will be clear enough in Intellisense if the method is well-documented.
    – Ryan Lundy
    Dec 11, 2009 at 19:25
29
votes

gitorious.org/cadenza is a full library of some of the most useful extension methods I've seen.

2
  • 12 fairly basic extension methods. I'm a bit underwhelmed by mono-rocks.
    – mackenir
    Nov 7, 2008 at 10:07
  • (I'm talking about the released version, not the one you need to use source-control to get)
    – mackenir
    Nov 7, 2008 at 10:27
28
votes

Here is one I use frequently for presentation formatting.

public static string ToTitleCase(this string mText)
{
    if (mText == null) return mText;

    System.Globalization.CultureInfo cultureInfo = System.Threading.Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture;
    System.Globalization.TextInfo textInfo = cultureInfo.TextInfo;

    // TextInfo.ToTitleCase only operates on the string if is all lower case, otherwise it returns the string unchanged.
    return textInfo.ToTitleCase(mText.ToLower());
}
1
  • Whoah, Pokemon exception handling is gonna hide issues like ThreadAbortException, etc. Please catch something specific. Jul 26, 2010 at 9:06
28
votes

Here's a to-and-from for Roman numerals. Not often used, but could be handy. Usage:

if ("IV".IsValidRomanNumeral())
{
   // Do useful stuff with the number 4.
}

Console.WriteLine("MMMDCCCLXXXVIII".ParseRomanNumeral());
Console.WriteLine(3888.ToRomanNumeralString());

The source:

    public static class RomanNumeralExtensions
    {
        private const int NumberOfRomanNumeralMaps = 13;

        private static readonly Dictionary<string, int> romanNumerals =
            new Dictionary<string, int>(NumberOfRomanNumeralMaps)
            {
                { "M", 1000 }, 
                { "CM", 900 }, 
                { "D", 500 }, 
                { "CD", 400 }, 
                { "C", 100 }, 
                { "XC", 90 }, 
                { "L", 50 }, 
                { "XL", 40 }, 
                { "X", 10 }, 
                { "IX", 9 }, 
                { "V", 5 }, 
                { "IV", 4 }, 
                { "I", 1 }
            };

        private static readonly Regex validRomanNumeral = new Regex(
            "^(?i:(?=[MDCLXVI])((M{0,3})((C[DM])|(D?C{0,3}))"
            + "?((X[LC])|(L?XX{0,2})|L)?((I[VX])|(V?(II{0,2}))|V)?))$", 
            RegexOptions.Compiled);

        public static bool IsValidRomanNumeral(this string value)
        {
            return validRomanNumeral.IsMatch(value);
        }

        public static int ParseRomanNumeral(this string value)
        {
            if (value == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("value");
            }

            value = value.ToUpperInvariant().Trim();

            var length = value.Length;

            if ((length == 0) || !value.IsValidRomanNumeral())
            {
                throw new ArgumentException("Empty or invalid Roman numeral string.", "value");
            }

            var total = 0;
            var i = length;

            while (i > 0)
            {
                var digit = romanNumerals[value[--i].ToString()];

                if (i > 0)
                {
                    var previousDigit = romanNumerals[value[i - 1].ToString()];

                    if (previousDigit < digit)
                    {
                        digit -= previousDigit;
                        i--;
                    }
                }

                total += digit;
            }

            return total;
        }

        public static string ToRomanNumeralString(this int value)
        {
            const int MinValue = 1;
            const int MaxValue = 3999;

            if ((value < MinValue) || (value > MaxValue))
            {
                throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("value", value, "Argument out of Roman numeral range.");
            }

            const int MaxRomanNumeralLength = 15;
            var sb = new StringBuilder(MaxRomanNumeralLength);

            foreach (var pair in romanNumerals)
            {
                while (value / pair.Value > 0)
                {
                    sb.Append(pair.Key);
                    value -= pair.Value;
                }
            }

            return sb.ToString();
        }
    }
1
  • That reminds me of the Python PEP 313, which was an April Fools joke to include Roman Numeral literals in python: python.org/dev/peps/pep-0313
    – torial
    Aug 7, 2010 at 16:22
25
votes

A convenient way to deal with sizes:

public static class Extensions {
    public static int K(this int value) {
        return value * 1024;
    }
    public static int M(this int value) {
        return value * 1024 * 1024;
    }
}

public class Program {
    public void Main() {
        WSHttpContextBinding serviceMultipleTokenBinding = new WSHttpContextBinding() {
            MaxBufferPoolSize = 2.M(), // instead of 2097152
            MaxReceivedMessageSize = 64.K(), // instead of 65536
        };
    }
}
1
  • In my opinion this is really poor coding style. Constants should be used instead, not obfuscated logic.
    – xxbbcc
    Feb 20, 2012 at 6:39
24
votes

For Winform Controls:

/// <summary>
/// Returns whether the function is being executed during design time in Visual Studio.
/// </summary>
public static bool IsDesignTime(this Control control)
{
    if (LicenseManager.UsageMode == LicenseUsageMode.Designtime)
    {
        return true;
    }

    if (control.Site != null && control.Site.DesignMode)
    {
        return true;
    }

    var parent = control.Parent;
    while (parent != null)
    {
        if (parent.Site != null && parent.Site.DesignMode)
        {
            return true;
        }
        parent = parent.Parent;
    }
    return false;
}

/// <summary>
/// Sets the DropDownWidth to ensure that no item's text is cut off.
/// </summary>
public static void SetDropDownWidth(this ComboBox comboBox)
{
    var g = comboBox.CreateGraphics();
    var font = comboBox.Font;
    float maxWidth = 0;

    foreach (var item in comboBox.Items)
    {
        maxWidth = Math.Max(maxWidth, g.MeasureString(item.ToString(), font).Width);
    }

    if (comboBox.Items.Count > comboBox.MaxDropDownItems)
    {
        maxWidth += SystemInformation.VerticalScrollBarWidth;
    }

    comboBox.DropDownWidth = Math.Max(comboBox.Width, Convert.ToInt32(maxWidth));
}

IsDesignTime Usage:

public class SomeForm : Form
{
    public SomeForm()
    {
        InitializeComponent();

        if (this.IsDesignTime())
        {
            return;
        }

        // Do something that makes the visual studio crash or hang if we're in design time,
        // but any other time executes just fine
    }
}

SetDropdownWidth Usage:

ComboBox cbo = new ComboBox { Width = 50 };
cbo.Items.Add("Short");
cbo.Items.Add("A little longer");
cbo.Items.Add("Holy cow, this is a really, really long item. How in the world will it fit?");
cbo.SetDropDownWidth();

I forgot to mention, feel free to use these on Codeplex...

1
23
votes

The ThrowIfArgumentIsNull is a nice way to do that null check we all should do.

public static class Extensions
{
    public static void ThrowIfArgumentIsNull<T>(this T obj, string parameterName) where T : class
    {
        if (obj == null) throw new ArgumentNullException(parameterName + " not allowed to be null");
    }
}

Below is the way to use it and it works on all classes in your namespace or wherever you use the namespace its within.

internal class Test
{
    public Test(string input1)
    {
        input1.ThrowIfArgumentIsNull("input1");
    }
}

It's ok to use this code on the CodePlex project.

6
  • I like this too, Jon has it in his, and I use something similar from Umbrella, could stand to drop "ArgumentIs" part.
    – cfeduke
    Nov 7, 2008 at 7:47
  • Yeah! this is a kewl extension method too :)
    – Pure.Krome
    Nov 7, 2008 at 9:55
  • 3
    If you use the ArgumentNullException-constructor with only 1 string-argument, that argument has to be just the parameter name, and not the error message. So your code should look like this: if (obj == null) throw new ArgumentNullException(parameterName); Nov 27, 2009 at 6:55
  • I'd use default(T) for this and remove the class requirement. May 6, 2010 at 13:07
  • 1
    @Joel: Non-default values for native types are legitimate arguments more often than null values. Checking against null makes more sense to me than checking against default. Of course, I just generalize the whole idea by saying Require.ThatArgument(input != null) or Require.ThatArgument(personId > 0). It doesn't take that much more code, it's a lot more flexible, and it reads nicely. I have additional overrides that take funcs for when you want to customize the error message or the exception itself. Aug 26, 2010 at 15:42
22
votes

I miss the Visual Basic's With statement when moving to C#, so here it goes:

public static void With<T>(this T obj, Action<T> act) { act(obj); }

And here's how to use it in C#:

someVeryVeryLonggggVariableName.With(x => {
    x.Int = 123;
    x.Str = "Hello";
    x.Str2 = " World!";
});

Saves a lot of typing!

Compare this to:

someVeryVeryLonggggVariableName.Int = 123;
someVeryVeryLonggggVariableName.Str = "Hello";
someVeryVeryLonggggVariableName.Str2 = " World!";

put in codeplex project

10
  • 4
    Just a guess, but think about what happens if your T is a struct.
    – Rauhotz
    Jan 20, 2009 at 23:09
  • 5
    I also use the c# 3.0 property initializer syntax wherever possible to achieve the same result.
    – Steve
    Jul 20, 2009 at 20:41
  • 3
    @chakrit, here's an example. It only applies when creating the object Button n = new Button { Name = "Button1", Width = 100, Height = 20, Enabled = true };
    – Steve
    Jul 30, 2009 at 17:00
  • 1
    This would be useful for when you have a lot of events to hook up, because C#'s property initializer syntax doesn't support events.
    – Gabe
    Jul 5, 2010 at 16:59
  • 1
    this is also userful outside of property initializers, because you can only use them when creating a new object. this extension can work on previously created objects. Jul 21, 2010 at 16:41
18
votes

Takes a camelCaseWord or PascalCaseWord and "wordifies" it, ie camelCaseWord => camel Case Word

public static string Wordify( this string camelCaseWord )
{
    // if the word is all upper, just return it
    if( !Regex.IsMatch( camelCaseWord, "[a-z]" ) )
        return camelCaseWord;

    return string.Join( " ", Regex.Split( camelCaseWord, @"(?<!^)(?=[A-Z])" ) );
}

I often use it in conjuction with Capitalize

public static string Capitalize( this string word )
{
    return word[0].ToString( ).ToUpper( ) + word.Substring( 1 );
}

Example usage

SomeEntityObject entity = DataAccessObject.GetSomeEntityObject( id );
List<PropertyInfo> properties = entity.GetType().GetPublicNonCollectionProperties( );

// wordify the property names to act as column headers for an html table or something
List<string> columns = properties.Select( p => p.Name.Capitalize( ).Wordify( ) ).ToList( );

Free to use in codeplex project

1
  • The Aggregate in Capitalize is pretty bad for performance, because it creates many string instances. Why not use word.Substring(1) instead ? Nov 20, 2009 at 0:16
17
votes

I found this one helpful

public static IEnumerable<T> EmptyIfNull<T>(this IEnumerable<T> pSeq)
{
    return pSeq ?? Enumerable.Empty<T>();
}

It removes the null check in the calling code. You could now do

MyList.EmptyIfNull().Where(....)
1
  • Yes, if someone forgot "Null Object Pattern" this method is useful to patch it. Collection should never be null. Jul 20, 2011 at 9:38
16
votes

Convert a double to string formatted using the specified culture:

public static class ExtensionMethods 
{
  public static string ToCurrency(this double value, string cultureName)
  {
    CultureInfo currentCulture = new CultureInfo(cultureName);
    return (string.Format(currentCulture, "{0:C}", value));
  }
}

Example:

double test = 154.20;
string testString = test.ToCurrency("en-US"); // $154.20
2
  • 13
    You should use Decimal for currency else you'll get rounding issues Nov 7, 2008 at 10:00
  • What about use an Enum in the parameter instead of plain string
    – Rulas
    Jan 22, 2009 at 16:02
15
votes

Below is an extension method that adapts Rick Strahl's code (and the comments too) to stop you having to guess or read the byte order mark of a byte array or text file each time you convert it to a string.

The snippet allows you to simply do:

byte[] buffer = File.ReadAllBytes(@"C:\file.txt");
string content = buffer.GetString();

If you find any bugs please add to the comments. Feel free to include it in the Codeplex project.

public static class Extensions
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Converts a byte array to a string, using its byte order mark to convert it to the right encoding.
    /// Original article: http://www.west-wind.com/WebLog/posts/197245.aspx
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="buffer">An array of bytes to convert</param>
    /// <returns>The byte as a string.</returns>
    public static string GetString(this byte[] buffer)
    {
        if (buffer == null || buffer.Length == 0)
            return "";

        // Ansi as default
        Encoding encoding = Encoding.Default;       

        /*
            EF BB BF    UTF-8 
            FF FE UTF-16    little endian 
            FE FF UTF-16    big endian 
            FF FE 00 00 UTF-32, little endian 
            00 00 FE FF UTF-32, big-endian 
         */

        if (buffer[0] == 0xef && buffer[1] == 0xbb && buffer[2] == 0xbf)
            encoding = Encoding.UTF8;
        else if (buffer[0] == 0xfe && buffer[1] == 0xff)
            encoding = Encoding.Unicode;
        else if (buffer[0] == 0xfe && buffer[1] == 0xff)
            encoding = Encoding.BigEndianUnicode; // utf-16be
        else if (buffer[0] == 0 && buffer[1] == 0 && buffer[2] == 0xfe && buffer[3] == 0xff)
            encoding = Encoding.UTF32;
        else if (buffer[0] == 0x2b && buffer[1] == 0x2f && buffer[2] == 0x76)
            encoding = Encoding.UTF7;

        using (MemoryStream stream = new MemoryStream())
        {
            stream.Write(buffer, 0, buffer.Length);
            stream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
            using (StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(stream, encoding))
            {
                return reader.ReadToEnd();
            }
        }
    }
}
2
  • Very usefull method, but I don't think it should be and extension method. Sep 22, 2009 at 15:11
  • If you're writing a text editor it probably warrants an extension method, but I agree most of the time it's probably no more than a static private method
    – Chris S
    Sep 22, 2009 at 18:39
15
votes

Here's one I just created today.

// requires .NET 4

public static TReturn NullOr<TIn, TReturn>(this TIn obj, Func<TIn, TReturn> func,
        TReturn elseValue = default(TReturn)) where TIn : class
    { return obj != null ? func(obj) : elseValue; }

// versions for CLR 2, which doesn't support optional params

public static TReturn NullOr<TIn, TReturn>(this TIn obj, Func<TIn, TReturn> func,
        TReturn elseValue) where TIn : class
    { return obj != null ? func(obj) : elseValue; }
public static TReturn NullOr<TIn, TReturn>(this TIn obj, Func<TIn, TReturn> func)
        where TIn : class
    { return obj != null ? func(obj) : default(TReturn); }

It lets you do this:

var lname = thingy.NullOr(t => t.Name).NullOr(n => n.ToLower());

which is more fluent and (IMO) easier to read than this:

var lname = (thingy != null ? thingy.Name : null) != null
    ? thingy.Name.ToLower() : null;
8
  • 1
    What if I want thingy.NullOr(t => t.Count), where Count is an int ? You should return default(TReturn) rather than null, that way you won't need the class constraint and it will work for value types too Oct 1, 2010 at 20:22
  • 2
    TIn should be required to be a class, otherwise this entire extension method makes no sense (value types cannot be null). And your example with t.Count does work with the above extension method. Could you take a second look?
    – scobi
    Oct 1, 2010 at 20:41
  • @Scott: this is a useful method to a common problem. However, I believe TReturn elseValue = default(TReturn) is only available to .NET 4.0? I have 3.5 SP1 and I've never seen that construct (neither has my compiler). I just moved this to inside the method. One issue, however, is that boxing a nullable type to object for use with the method yields an unexpected result (0 vs expected null). Oct 2, 2010 at 0:51
  • @Jim: the default(T) keyword has been there since VS2005, but I think default parameters is a new .NET 4 feature. The easy way around it should be to have two variants, one that takes the param and one that does not. I'll update the answer to be CLR 2.0 compatible. Regarding the boxing - that's the point of default. It will be 0-initialized data for a value type, and null for all reference types. A TReturn of a value type should remain unboxed all the way through the function.
    – scobi
    Oct 4, 2010 at 2:04
  • @Scott: My question was about the default parameter, which I've only seen in dynamic languages like Ruby. My point regarding nullable types is that returning x.Value should return null (if, for example, int? was null) or the value if int? has a value. Returning 0 when int? x = null is passed and boxed to object is an odd case. I've seen similar checks for nullable types in libraries such as fluent nhibernate and linfu (I think) for this specific case, allowing you to drop the class constraint as previously suggested. Oct 5, 2010 at 2:17
14
votes

"Please mark your answers with an acceptance to put the code in the Codeplex project."

Why? All the Stuff on this site under CC-by-sa-2.5, so just put your Extension overflow Project under the same license and you can freely use it.

Anyway, here is a String.Reverse function, based on this question.

/// <summary>
/// Reverse a String
/// </summary>
/// <param name="input">The string to Reverse</param>
/// <returns>The reversed String</returns>
public static string Reverse(this string input)
{
    char[] array = input.ToCharArray();
    Array.Reverse(array);
    return new string(array);
}
6
  • Doesn't String already implement IEnumerable<char>? So you'd just need to do return new String(input.Reverse()); Jul 2, 2010 at 15:13
  • An implementation using StringBuilder should be faster. Oct 14, 2010 at 11:04
  • 1
    @CodeInChaos The Benchmarking in stackoverflow.com/questions/228038 measured that StringBuilder is slower.
    – Michael Stum
    Oct 14, 2010 at 16:23
  • You're right. It seems like the thread safety requirements (probably to ensure immutability of the string returned by ToString) slow StringBuilder down a lot. Oct 14, 2010 at 17:02
  • 2
    Hope you don't encounter any surrogates or combining characters.
    – dalle
    Oct 14, 2010 at 19:03
14
votes

I got tired of tedious null-checking while pulling values from MySqlDataReader, so:

public static DateTime? GetNullableDateTime(this MySqlDataReader dr, string fieldName)
{
    DateTime? nullDate = null;
    return dr.IsDBNull(dr.GetOrdinal(fieldName)) ? nullDate : dr.GetDateTime(fieldName);
}

public static string GetNullableString(this MySqlDataReader dr, string fieldName)
{
    return dr.IsDBNull(dr.GetOrdinal(fieldName)) ? String.Empty : dr.GetString(fieldName);
}

public static char? GetNullableChar(this MySqlDataReader dr, string fieldName)
{
    char? nullChar = null;
    return dr.IsDBNull(dr.GetOrdinal(fieldName)) ? nullChar : dr.GetChar(fieldName);
}

Of course this could be used with any SqlDataReader.


Both hangy and Joe had some good comments on how to do this, and I have since had an opportunity to implement something similar in a different context, so here is another version:

public static int? GetNullableInt32(this IDataRecord dr, int ordinal)
{
    int? nullInt = null;
    return dr.IsDBNull(ordinal) ? nullInt : dr.GetInt32(ordinal);
}

public static int? GetNullableInt32(this IDataRecord dr, string fieldname)
{
    int ordinal = dr.GetOrdinal(fieldname);
    return dr.GetNullableInt32(ordinal);
}

public static bool? GetNullableBoolean(this IDataRecord dr, int ordinal)
{
    bool? nullBool = null;
    return dr.IsDBNull(ordinal) ? nullBool : dr.GetBoolean(ordinal);
}

public static bool? GetNullableBoolean(this IDataRecord dr, string fieldname)
{
    int ordinal = dr.GetOrdinal(fieldname);
    return dr.GetNullableBoolean(ordinal);
}
9
  • 2
    This should also work as an extension method for IDataReader.
    – hangy
    Nov 8, 2008 at 13:07
  • 2
    Actually, make the "this" parameter of type IDataRecord for maximum compatibility. In my version of this, I have an overload that takes an ordinal, which the fieldName version calls. Saves the "GetOrdinal" followed by a lookup by name. Nov 11, 2008 at 2:20
  • There is a proper implementation, that can deal with any value type: rabdullin.com/journal/2008/12/6/… Dec 6, 2008 at 10:37
  • Thanks Rinat, I have actually got this down to a single generic method - see stackoverflow.com/questions/303287 Dec 8, 2008 at 17:04
  • All of these methods appear to be un-needed as you can use the as keyword to get a value from a reader allowing for null. If you combine the null coalescing ?? operator with the as operator you can even have a non-null default value for going directly to a value type. See stackoverflow.com/questions/746767/… May 14, 2010 at 9:47
14
votes

It irritated me that LINQ gives me an OrderBy that takes a class implementing IComparer as an argument, but does not support passing in a simple anonymous comparer function. I rectified that.

This class creates an IComparer from your comparer function...

/// <summary>
///     Creates an <see cref="IComparer{T}"/> instance for the given
///     delegate function.
/// </summary>
internal class ComparerFactory<T> : IComparer<T>
{
    public static IComparer<T> Create(Func<T, T, int> comparison)
    {
        return new ComparerFactory<T>(comparison);
    }

    private readonly Func<T, T, int> _comparison;

    private ComparerFactory(Func<T, T, int> comparison)
    {
        _comparison = comparison;
    }

    #region IComparer<T> Members

    public int Compare(T x, T y)
    {
        return _comparison(x, y);
    }

    #endregion
}

...and these extension methods expose my new OrderBy overloads on enumerables. I doubt this works for LINQ to SQL, but it's great for LINQ to Objects.

public static class EnumerableExtensions
{
    /// <summary>
    /// Sorts the elements of a sequence in ascending order by using a specified comparison delegate.
    /// </summary>
    public static IOrderedEnumerable<TSource> OrderBy<TSource, TKey>(this IEnumerable<TSource> source, Func<TSource, TKey> keySelector,
                                                                     Func<TKey, TKey, int> comparison)
    {
        var comparer = ComparerFactory<TKey>.Create(comparison);
        return source.OrderBy(keySelector, comparer);
    }

    /// <summary>
    /// Sorts the elements of a sequence in descending order by using a specified comparison delegate.
    /// </summary>
    public static IOrderedEnumerable<TSource> OrderByDescending<TSource, TKey>(this IEnumerable<TSource> source, Func<TSource, TKey> keySelector,
                                                                               Func<TKey, TKey, int> comparison)
    {
        var comparer = ComparerFactory<TKey>.Create(comparison);
        return source.OrderByDescending(keySelector, comparer);
    }
}

You're welcome to put this on codeplex if you like.

13
votes

This one is for MVC it adds the ability to generate a <label /> tag to the Html variable that is available in every ViewPage. Hopefully it will be of use to others trying to develop similar extensions.

Use:

<%= Html.Label("LabelId", "ForId", "Text")%>

Output:

<label id="LabelId" for="ForId">Text</label>

Code:

public static class HtmlHelperExtensions
{
    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string @for, string text)
    {
        return Html.Label(null, @for, text);
    }

    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string @for, string text, object htmlAttributes)
    {
        return Html.Label(null, @for, text, htmlAttributes);
    }

    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string @for, string text, IDictionary<string, object> htmlAttributes)
    {
        return Html.Label(null, @for, text, htmlAttributes);
    }

    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string id, string @for, string text)
    {
        return Html.Label(id, @for, text, null);
    }

    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string id, string @for, string text, object htmlAttributes)
    {
        return Html.Label(id, @for, text, new RouteValueDictionary(htmlAttributes));
    }

    public static string Label(this HtmlHelper Html, string id, string @for, string text, IDictionary<string, object> htmlAttributes)
    {
        TagBuilder tag = new TagBuilder("label");

        tag.MergeAttributes(htmlAttributes);

        if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(id))
            tag.MergeAttribute("id", Html.AttributeEncode(id));

        tag.MergeAttribute("for", Html.AttributeEncode(@for));

        tag.SetInnerText(Html.Encode(text));

        return tag.ToString(TagRenderMode.Normal);
    }
}
2
  • Check out MvcContrib.FluentHtml Nov 2, 2009 at 19:07
  • This probably should be duplicated with Literal instead.
    – Mark Hurd
    Sep 3, 2010 at 7:05
12
votes

Turn this:

DbCommand command = connection.CreateCommand();
command.CommandText = "SELECT @param";

DbParameter param = command.CreateParameter();
param.ParameterName = "@param";
param.Value = "Hello World";

command.Parameters.Add(param);

... into this:

DbCommand command = connection.CreateCommand("SELECT {0}", "Hello World");

... using this extension method:

using System;
using System.Data.Common;
using System.Globalization;
using System.Reflection;

namespace DbExtensions {

   public static class Db {

      static readonly Func<DbConnection, DbProviderFactory> getDbProviderFactory;
      static readonly Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string> getParameterName;
      static readonly Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string> getParameterPlaceholder;

      static Db() {

         getDbProviderFactory = (Func<DbConnection, DbProviderFactory>)Delegate.CreateDelegate(typeof(Func<DbConnection, DbProviderFactory>), typeof(DbConnection).GetProperty("DbProviderFactory", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic).GetGetMethod(true));
         getParameterName = (Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string>)Delegate.CreateDelegate(typeof(Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string>), typeof(DbCommandBuilder).GetMethod("GetParameterName", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic, Type.DefaultBinder, new Type[] { typeof(Int32) }, null));
         getParameterPlaceholder = (Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string>)Delegate.CreateDelegate(typeof(Func<DbCommandBuilder, int, string>), typeof(DbCommandBuilder).GetMethod("GetParameterPlaceholder", BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic, Type.DefaultBinder, new Type[] { typeof(Int32) }, null));
      }

      public static DbProviderFactory GetProviderFactory(this DbConnection connection) {
         return getDbProviderFactory(connection);
      }

      public static DbCommand CreateCommand(this DbConnection connection, string commandText, params object[] parameters) {

         if (connection == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("connection");

         return CreateCommandImpl(GetProviderFactory(connection).CreateCommandBuilder(), connection.CreateCommand(), commandText, parameters);
      }

      private static DbCommand CreateCommandImpl(DbCommandBuilder commandBuilder, DbCommand command, string commandText, params object[] parameters) {

         if (commandBuilder == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("commandBuilder");
         if (command == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("command");
         if (commandText == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("commandText");

         if (parameters == null || parameters.Length == 0) {
            command.CommandText = commandText;
            return command;
         }

         object[] paramPlaceholders = new object[parameters.Length];

         for (int i = 0; i < paramPlaceholders.Length; i++) {

            DbParameter dbParam = command.CreateParameter();
            dbParam.ParameterName = getParameterName(commandBuilder, i);
            dbParam.Value = parameters[i] ?? DBNull.Value;
            command.Parameters.Add(dbParam);

            paramPlaceholders[i] = getParameterPlaceholder(commandBuilder, i);
         }

         command.CommandText = String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture, commandText, paramPlaceholders);

         return command;
      }
   }
}

More ADO.NET extension methods: DbExtensions

1
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