2

I have a method where I have several optional boolean parameters, different properties of an object will be given a value based on which parameters are true.

Here is the method for context:

public static AutoPatientLookup InitializeTestPatientInfo(bool SSN = false, bool PatientNumber = false, bool Gender = false)
{
    AutoPatientLookup TestAPIParameters = new AutoPatientLookup();
    TestAPIParameters.FirstName = "First";
    TestAPIParameters.LastName = "Last";
    TestAPIParameters.DOB = "4/9/1953";
    TestAPIParameters.PracticeID = 11071;

    if (SSN)
    {
        TestAPIParameters.SSN = 000010281;
    }
    if (PatientNumber)
    {
        TestAPIParameters.PatientNumber = 458;
    }
    if (Gender)
    {
        TestAPIParameters.Gender = "F";
    }

    return TestAPIParameters;
}

However, sometimes I want the second or third boolean parameter to be true but I'm unable to designate that as the parameter I want to switch without explicitly stating true or false for the preceding parameters.

This if I want to initialize an AutoPatientLookup object that has a value for its gender property, I would have to call it like this:

InitializeTestPatientInfo(false,false,true);

I tried something along the lines of

InitializeTestPatientInfo(Gender = true);

and

InitializeTestPatientInfo(bool Gender = true);

but nothing seems to work. Is there a correct syntax for accomplishing for what I'm attempting? Even though the initialization syntax isn't very inconvenient when there are only three boolean parameters this could be more applicable if there are dozens.

6
  • 2
    Gender:true and so on By the way, Intellisense should show it for you
    – Steve
    May 11, 2018 at 19:18
  • 1
    It's amazing what something like "c# calling optional parameters" can find - learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/csharp/programming-guide/… , dotnetperls.com/optional-parameters .. anyway, the different syntax is needed because C# method calls support X(expr), so X(Gender = true) is attempting to assign to Gender (which does not exist) and then pass the result of the assignment expression to the method call.. (this is also why x = y = z is allowed in C#). May 11, 2018 at 19:19
  • 1
    Beware of optional parameters in public methods. Read the second part of my answer here to learn why. May 11, 2018 at 19:21
  • @Steve Your suggestion worked but for some reason Intellisense isn't picking up on it.
    – W.Harr
    May 11, 2018 at 19:37
  • Glad to help :-) May 11, 2018 at 19:38

3 Answers 3

8

The syntax you want to use is:

InitializeTestPatientInfo(Gender: true);
7

Try

InitializeTestPatientInfo(Gender: true);
6

You can name your parameter that you are assigning:

Do this instead

InitializeTestPatientInfo(Gender: true);

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