I'd created a Map function in C# to act, in many ways, as it's JavaScript equivalent to project object types. I've since renamed these methods to 'Select' to use as overloads so they feel more 'integrated'. This is a chain, so bear with me, but the affected functions look like this...
public static TResult Project<TInput, TResult>(this TInput input, Func<TInput, TResult> projectionMapping)
=> projectionMapping(input);
public static TResult Project<TInput, TAccumulatedValue, TIncrementingValue, TResult>(this TInput input, Func<TInput, TAccumulatedValue, TResult> projectionMapping,
Func<TAccumulatedValue, TIncrementingValue, TAccumulatedValue> accumulator, TAccumulatedValue initialAccumulatorValue, TIncrementingValue increment)
=> projectionMapping(input, accumulator(initialAccumulatorValue, increment));
public static IEnumerable<TResult> Select<TInput, TAccumulatedValue, TIncrementingValue, TResult>(this IEnumerable<TInput> input,
Func<TInput, TAccumulatedValue, TResult> projectionMapping, Func<TAccumulatedValue, TIncrementingValue, TAccumulatedValue> accumulator,
TAccumulatedValue initialAccumulatorValue, TIncrementingValue increment)
=> input.Select(item => item.Project(projectionMapping, accumulator, initialAccumulatorValue, increment));
// This doesn't work.
public static IEnumerable<TResult> Select<TInput, TResult>(this IEnumerable<TInput> input,
Func<TInput, int, TResult> projectionMapping, int initialAccumulatorValue = -1, int increment = 1)
{
return input.Select(projectionMapping, (acc, inc) => acc + inc,
initialAccumulatorValue, increment);
}
I am using the int version of the map method, with the accumulator written into it, as follows...
MyList.Add(new List<MyObject>(rowValues.Map((val, headerNumber)
=> new MyObject(headerNumber, val), 0, 10)));
The problem is, that the value of headerNumber never changes (It's always 10) - The accumulator runs once and then is running for each Mapping but it's not remembering it's accumulation between runs. I feel I'm missing something glaringly obvious here but I can't see the wood for the trees.
If I input (for example) an array like this...
rowValues = new string[] { "Item 1", "Item 2", "Item 3" };
I would expect a list of MyObject items that contain the following data...
- 10 | "Item 1"
- 20 | "Item 2"
- 30 | "Item 3"
Select
that also takes the index: msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb534869(v=vs.110).aspx I think that already implements what you want