88

Let me use the following example to explain my question:

public string ExampleFunction(string Variable) {
    return something;
}

string WhatIsMyName = "Hello World";
string Hello = ExampleFunction(WhatIsMyName);

When I pass the variable WhatIsMyName to the ExampleFunction, I want to be able to get a string of the original variable's name. Perhaps something like:

Variable.OriginalName.ToString()

Is there any way to do this?

7
  • 59
    This is a recurring theme that drives me nuts. An intellectual question that's going to be used to do something, and instead of an answer.. people want to know why you want to do.. There's enough logic there to answer the question... Aug 16, 2014 at 21:09
  • 1
    Johnny5's answer should be the accepted one, please change it @GateKiller Feb 11, 2016 at 23:14
  • 2
    @JonLimjap storeValue(my_variable) instead of storeValue(my_variable,"my_variable")
    – beppe9000
    May 18, 2017 at 10:42
  • 2
    Actually @reggaeguitar, that isn't quite correct. You'll see in the example that GateKiller wants to be able to pass the variable to a method and then get the variable's name from within that method. Using nameof does not solve the issue because now you have to pass the name into any methods where you want to use it. The point of the question is to be able to determine the name without passing it around everywhere you need it. Johnny5's info is useful, but not the correct answer.
    – WiredWiz
    Jun 30, 2017 at 16:27
  • 1
    @WiredWiz You're right, I stand corrected. Jun 30, 2017 at 19:06

22 Answers 22

67

What you want isn't possible directly but you can use Expressions in C# 3.0:

public void ExampleFunction(Expression<Func<string, string>> f) {
    Console.WriteLine((f.Body as MemberExpression).Member.Name);
}

ExampleFunction(x => WhatIsMyName);

Note that this relies on unspecified behaviour and while it does work in Microsoft’s current C# and VB compilers, and in Mono’s C# compiler, there’s no guarantee that this won’t stop working in future versions.

5
  • Any way to do this with a property rather than a local variable? Thanks.
    – pbz
    Apr 3, 2009 at 22:16
  • 3
    For the purpose of an Expression, a local variable actually is a property (.Member.Name – this is a direct consequence of the closure created by the compiler to implement the lambda expression) so the above code should also work for properties. Apr 6, 2009 at 9:01
  • 1
    This answer relies on a non-standardized behaviour of the Microsoft C# compiler, and might break under other compilers or future versions. Refer to my question and answer on the topic.
    – Douglas
    Oct 3, 2013 at 21:57
  • 4
    @Douglas Thanks, good to know. For what it’s worth, Eric Lippert’s rant about this seems a bit immature. Other languages do standardise this and his whole rant seems to be predicated on the fact that specifying this behaviour is baaaad, which seems to be quite wrong, or is at least completely non-obvious. On the contrary: this is the natural implementation of the feature, it’s efficient, safe, and there’s no a priori reason not to standardise it. Oct 3, 2013 at 22:52
  • 1
    @Soko posted a duplicate question that received this same answer with additional details: stackoverflow.com/a/37640136/228738 Nov 28, 2017 at 23:47
40

This isn't exactly possible, the way you would want. C# 6.0 they Introduce the nameof Operator which should help improve and simplify the code. The name of operator resolves the name of the variable passed into it.

Usage for your case would look like this:

public string ExampleFunction(string variableName) {
    //Construct your log statement using c# 6.0 string interpolation
    return $"Error occurred in {variableName}";
}

string WhatIsMyName = "Hello World";
string Hello = ExampleFunction(nameof(WhatIsMyName));

A major benefit is that it is done at compile time,

The nameof expression is a constant. In all cases, nameof(...) is evaluated at compile-time to produce a string. Its argument is not evaluated at runtime, and is considered unreachable code (however it does not emit an "unreachable code" warning).

More information can be found here

Older Version Of C 3.0 and above
To Build on Nawfals answer

GetParameterName2(new { variable });

//Hack to assure compiler warning is generated specifying this method calling conventions
[Obsolete("Note you must use a single parametered AnonymousType When Calling this method")]
public static string GetParameterName<T>(T item) where T : class
{
    if (item == null)
        return string.Empty;

    return typeof(T).GetProperties()[0].Name;
}
0
23
static void Main(string[] args)
{
  Console.WriteLine("Name is '{0}'", GetName(new {args}));
  Console.ReadLine();
}

static string GetName<T>(T item) where T : class
{
  var properties = typeof(T).GetProperties();
  Enforce.That(properties.Length == 1);
  return properties[0].Name;
}

More details are in this blog post.

3
  • 3
    Link is broken, though the solution looks really neat. Perhaps you could add a few details here?
    – Clément
    May 9, 2013 at 20:13
  • var variableName = "value"; result = (new { variableName }).GetType().GetProperties()[0].Name; new { variableName } create anonymous class with variableName = "value" property, that way .GetProperties()[0].Name get the name of this property
    – elpezganzo
    May 12, 2016 at 18:53
  • Instead of wrapping the parameter, you could do new { item }.GetType().GetProperties()[0].Name
    – mr5
    Dec 19, 2018 at 2:59
18

Three ways:

1) Something without reflection at all:

GetParameterName1(new { variable });

public static string GetParameterName1<T>(T item) where T : class
{
    if (item == null)
        return string.Empty;

    return item.ToString().TrimStart('{').TrimEnd('}').Split('=')[0].Trim();
}

2) Uses reflection, but this is way faster than other two.

GetParameterName2(new { variable });

public static string GetParameterName2<T>(T item) where T : class
{
    if (item == null)
        return string.Empty;

    return typeof(T).GetProperties()[0].Name;
}

3) The slowest of all, don't use.

GetParameterName3(() => variable);

public static string GetParameterName3<T>(Expression<Func<T>> expr)
{
    if (expr == null)
        return string.Empty;

    return ((MemberExpression)expr.Body).Member.Name;
}

To get a combo parameter name and value, you can extend these methods. Of course its easy to get value if you pass the parameter separately as another argument, but that's inelegant. Instead:

1)

public static string GetParameterInfo1<T>(T item) where T : class
{
    if (item == null)
        return string.Empty;

    var param = item.ToString().TrimStart('{').TrimEnd('}').Split('=');
    return "Parameter: '" + param[0].Trim() +
           "' = " + param[1].Trim();
}

2)

public static string GetParameterInfo2<T>(T item) where T : class
{
    if (item == null)
        return string.Empty;

    var param = typeof(T).GetProperties()[0];
    return "Parameter: '" + param.Name +
           "' = " + param.GetValue(item, null);
}

3)

public static string GetParameterInfo3<T>(Expression<Func<T>> expr)
{
    if (expr == null)
        return string.Empty;

    var param = (MemberExpression)expr.Body;
    return "Parameter: '" + param.Member.Name +
           "' = " + ((FieldInfo)param.Member).GetValue(((ConstantExpression)param.Expression).Value);
}

1 and 2 are of comparable speed now, 3 is again sluggish.

1
  • Thx i am using 2) .. What if i have multiple parameters in my anon function? :) Nov 18, 2021 at 13:50
15

I know this post is really old, but since there is now a way in .Net 6 I thought I would share so others know.

You can now use CallerArgumentExpressionAttribute as shown

    /// <summary>
    /// Will throw argument exception if string IsNullOrEmpty returns true
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="str"></param>
    /// <param name="str_name"></param>
    /// <exception cref="ArgumentException"></exception>
    public static void ValidateNotNullorEmpty(this string str,
        [CallerArgumentExpression("str")]string str_name=null)
    {       
        if (string.IsNullOrEmpty(str))
        {
            throw new ArgumentException($"'{str_name}' cannot be null or empty.", str_name);
        }
    }

Now call with:

param.ValidateNotNullorEmpty();

will throw error: "param cannot be null or empty."

instead of "str cannot be null or empty"

0
11

Yes! It is possible. I have been looking for a solution to this for a long time and have finally come up with a hack that solves it (it's a bit nasty). I would not recommend using this as part of your program and I only think it works in debug mode. For me this doesn't matter as I only use it as a debugging tool in my console class so I can do:

int testVar = 1;
bool testBoolVar = True;
myConsole.Writeline(testVar);
myConsole.Writeline(testBoolVar);

the output to the console would be:

testVar: 1
testBoolVar: True

Here is the function I use to do that (not including the wrapping code for my console class.

    public Dictionary<string, string> nameOfAlreadyAcessed = new Dictionary<string, string>();
    public string nameOf(object obj, int level = 1)
    {
        StackFrame stackFrame = new StackTrace(true).GetFrame(level);
        string fileName = stackFrame.GetFileName();
        int lineNumber = stackFrame.GetFileLineNumber();
        string uniqueId = fileName + lineNumber;
        if (nameOfAlreadyAcessed.ContainsKey(uniqueId))
            return nameOfAlreadyAcessed[uniqueId];
        else
        {
            System.IO.StreamReader file = new System.IO.StreamReader(fileName);
            for (int i = 0; i < lineNumber - 1; i++)
                file.ReadLine();
            string varName = file.ReadLine().Split(new char[] { '(', ')' })[1];
            nameOfAlreadyAcessed.Add(uniqueId, varName);
            return varName;
        }
    }
2
  • Nice work. It should work but it should have a very high impact on performance because it implies to read source file. I wonder if there is a more efficient way to do the same job? Jul 25, 2018 at 14:52
  • 2
    Truly horrible, excellent work! It would be nice if nameof let you look up one level of the stack, so nameof(x,1) would give you the name of the expression in the caller's scope that was passed as parameter x to the current method.
    – Ed Avis
    Oct 15, 2019 at 17:17
5

This would be very useful to do in order to create good exception messages causing people to be able to pinpoint errors better. Line numbers help, but you might not get them in prod, and when you do get them, if there are big statements in code, you typically only get the first line of the whole statement.

For instance, if you call .Value on a nullable that isn't set, you'll get an exception with a failure message, but as this functionality is lacking, you won't see what property was null. If you do this twice in one statement, for instance to set parameters to some method, you won't be able to see what nullable was not set.

Creating code like Verify.NotNull(myvar, nameof(myvar)) is the best workaround I've found so far, but would be great to get rid of the need to add the extra parameter.

1
  • 1
    This is exactly what we are doing in our project. We use exceptions to flag failing method pre-conditions. These need to contain the name of the argument to be useful. We have Verify.SomeCondition(arg, nameof(arg)) scattered everywhere at the moment!
    – pius
    Feb 25, 2020 at 10:20
4

No, but whenever you find yourself doing extremely complex things like this, you might want to re-think your solution. Remember that code should be easier to read than it was to write.

3

System.Environment.StackTrace will give you a string that includes the current call stack. You could parse that to get the information, which includes the variable names for each call.

2

Well Try this Utility class,

public static class Utility
{
    public static Tuple<string, TSource> GetNameAndValue<TSource>(Expression<Func<TSource>> sourceExpression)
    {
        Tuple<String, TSource> result = null;
        Type type = typeof (TSource);
        Func<MemberExpression, Tuple<String, TSource>> process = delegate(MemberExpression memberExpression)
                                                                    {
                                                                        ConstantExpression constantExpression = (ConstantExpression)memberExpression.Expression;
                                                                        var name = memberExpression.Member.Name;
                                                                        var value = ((FieldInfo)memberExpression.Member).GetValue(constantExpression.Value);
                                                                        return new Tuple<string, TSource>(name, (TSource) value);
                                                                    };

        Expression exception = sourceExpression.Body;
        if (exception is MemberExpression)
        {
            result = process((MemberExpression)sourceExpression.Body);
        }
        else if (exception is UnaryExpression)
        {
            UnaryExpression unaryExpression = (UnaryExpression)sourceExpression.Body;
            result = process((MemberExpression)unaryExpression.Operand);
        }
        else
        {
            throw new Exception("Expression type unknown.");
        }

        return result;
    }


}

And User It Like

    /*ToDo : Test Result*/
    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        /*Test : primivit types*/
        long maxNumber = 123123;
        Tuple<string, long> longVariable = Utility.GetNameAndValue(() => maxNumber);
        string longVariableName = longVariable.Item1;
        long longVariableValue = longVariable.Item2;

        /*Test : user define types*/
        Person aPerson = new Person() { Id = "123", Name = "Roy" };
        Tuple<string, Person> personVariable = Utility.GetNameAndValue(() => aPerson);
        string personVariableName = personVariable.Item1;
        Person personVariableValue = personVariable.Item2;

        /*Test : anonymous types*/
        var ann = new { Id = "123", Name = "Roy" };
        var annVariable = Utility.GetNameAndValue(() => ann);
        string annVariableName = annVariable.Item1;
        var annVariableValue = annVariable.Item2;

        /*Test : Enum tyoes*/
        Active isActive = Active.Yes;
        Tuple<string, Active> isActiveVariable = Utility.GetNameAndValue(() => isActive);
        string isActiveVariableName = isActiveVariable.Item1;
        Active isActiveVariableValue = isActiveVariable.Item2;
    }
2

Do this

var myVariable = 123;
myVariable.Named(() => myVariable);
var name = myVariable.Name();
// use name how you like

or naming in code by hand

var myVariable = 123.Named("my variable");
var name = myVariable.Name();

using this class

public static class ObjectInstanceExtensions
{
    private static Dictionary<object, string> namedInstances = new Dictionary<object, string>();

    public static void Named<T>(this T instance, Expression<Func<T>> expressionContainingOnlyYourInstance)
    {
        var name = ((MemberExpression)expressionContainingOnlyYourInstance.Body).Member.Name;
        instance.Named(name);            
    }

    public static T Named<T>(this T instance, string named)
    {
        if (namedInstances.ContainsKey(instance)) namedInstances[instance] = named;
        else namedInstances.Add(instance, named);
        return instance;
    }        

    public static string Name<T>(this T instance)
    {
        if (namedInstances.ContainsKey(instance)) return namedInstances[instance];
        throw new NotImplementedException("object has not been named");
    }        
}

Code tested and most elegant I can come up with.

4
  • I personally prefer naming by hand as using the expression option means the variable references itself therefore hifing intellisense IDE helpers from highlighting references to used variable. A little more time consuming but generally more readable.
    – kernowcode
    Jun 6, 2014 at 9:41
  • but, if you are using really descriptive variable names then the former would be very useful.
    – kernowcode
    Jun 6, 2014 at 9:43
  • this does'n work if you Named() 2 variables referencing the same instance. See this example
    – Gian Paolo
    Nov 21, 2015 at 11:55
  • True, this is by design where the unique object should only have one name. Perhaps an exception should be thrown instead if instance already named. The code can be modified to overcome this, but getting the name of an object would have to return a list. I think the code as it stands meets most code needs following good design principles. I can't really remember when I last created to objects of the same instance. Thanks for introducing me to .NET Fiddle, very good.
    – kernowcode
    Nov 23, 2015 at 11:58
2

Continuing with the Caller* attribute series (i.e CallerMemberName, CallerFilePath and CallerLineNumber), CallerArgumentExpressionAttribute is available since C# Next (more info here).

The following example is inspired by Paul Mcilreavy's The CallerArgumentExpression Attribute in C# 8.0:

public static void ThrowIfNullOrWhitespace(this string self, 
             [CallerArgumentExpression("self")] string paramName = default)
{
    if (self is null)
    {
        throw new ArgumentNullException(paramName);
    }

    if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(self))
    {
        throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException(paramName, self, "Value cannot be whitespace");
    }        
}
1

Thanks for all the responses. I guess I'll just have to go with what I'm doing now.

For those who wanted to know why I asked the above question. I have the following function:

string sMessages(ArrayList aMessages, String sType) {
    string sReturn = String.Empty;
    if (aMessages.Count > 0) {
        sReturn += "<p class=\"" + sType + "\">";
        for (int i = 0; i < aMessages.Count; i++) {
            sReturn += aMessages[i] + "<br />";
        }
        sReturn += "</p>";
    }
    return sReturn;
}

I send it an array of error messages and a css class which is then returned as a string for a webpage.

Every time I call this function, I have to define sType. Something like:

output += sMessages(aErrors, "errors");

As you can see, my variables is called aErrors and my css class is called errors. I was hoping my cold could figure out what class to use based on the variable name I sent it.

Again, thanks for all the responses.

1

thanks to visual studio 2022 , you can use this

function

       public void showname(dynamic obj) {
            obj.GetType().GetProperties().ToList().ForEach(state => {
                NameAndValue($"{state.Name}:{state.GetValue(obj, null).ToString()}");
            });
        }

to use

   var myname = "dddd";
   showname(new { myname });
0

The short answer is no ... unless you are really really motivated.

The only way to do this would be via reflection and stack walking. You would have to get a stack frame, work out whereabouts in the calling function you where invoked from and then using the CodeDOM try to find the right part of the tree to see what the expression was.

For example, what if the invocation was ExampleFunction("a" + "b")?

1
  • This was answered in 2008, so I had to upvote it to get rid of the negative votes
    – John C
    Sep 9, 2020 at 20:19
0

No. A reference to your string variable gets passed to the funcion--there isn't any inherent metadeta about it included. Even reflection wouldn't get you out of the woods here--working backwards from a single reference type doesn't get you enough info to do what you need to do.

Better go back to the drawing board on this one!

rp

0

You could use reflection to get all the properties of an object, than loop through it, and get the value of the property where the name (of the property) matches the passed in parameter.

0

Well had a bit of look. of course you can't use any Type information. Also, the name of a local variable is not available at runtime because their names are not compiled into the assembly's metadata.

0

GateKiller, what's wrong with my workaround? You could rewrite your function trivially to use it (I've taken the liberty to improve the function on the fly):

static string sMessages(Expression<Func<List<string>>> aMessages) {
    var messages = aMessages.Compile()();

    if (messages.Count == 0) {
        return "";
    }

    StringBuilder ret = new StringBuilder();
    string sType = ((MemberExpression)aMessages.Body).Member.Name;

    ret.AppendFormat("<p class=\"{0}\">", sType);
    foreach (string msg in messages) {
        ret.Append(msg);
        ret.Append("<br />");
    }
    ret.Append("</p>");
    return ret.ToString();
}

Call it like this:

var errors = new List<string>() { "Hi", "foo" };
var ret = sMessages(() => errors);
0

A way to get it can be reading the code file and splitting it with comma and parenthesis...

var trace = new StackTrace(true).GetFrame(1);
var line = File.ReadAllLines(trace.GetFileName())[trace.GetFileLineNumber()];
var argumentNames = line.Split(new[] { ",", "(", ")", ";" }, 
                               StringSplitOptions.TrimEntries)
                        .Where(x => x.Length > 0)
                        .Skip(1).ToList();
-1

If I understand you correctly, you want the string "WhatIsMyName" to appear inside the Hello string.

string Hello = ExampleFunction(WhatIsMyName);

If the use case is that it increases the reusability of ExampleFunction and that Hello shall contain something like "Hello, Peter (from WhatIsMyName)", then I think a solution would be to expand the ExampleFunction to accept:

string Hello = ExampleFunction(WhatIsMyName,nameof(WhatIsMyName));

So that the name is passed as a separate string. Yes, it is not exactly what you asked and you will have to type it twice. But it is refactor safe, readable, does not use the debug interface and the chance of Error is minimal because they appear together in the consuming code.

string Hello1 = ExampleFunction(WhatIsMyName,nameof(WhatIsMyName));
string Hello2 = ExampleFunction(SomebodyElse,nameof(SomebodyElse));
string Hello3 = ExampleFunction(HerName,nameof(HerName));
-11

No. I don't think so.

The variable name that you use is for your convenience and readability. The compiler doesn't need it & just chucks it out if I'm not mistaken.

If it helps, you could define a new class called NamedParameter with attributes Name and Param. You then pass this object around as parameters.

4
  • 13
    The newer duplicate of this original question may have a possible answer of Yes: stackoverflow.com/questions/9801624/…
    – F.I.V
    Sep 8, 2013 at 10:34
  • 4
    @alfa, the answer you've linked to gives the parameter name, not the argument name passed in to the function as asked for in this question.
    – Josh Noe
    Oct 9, 2013 at 16:10
  • 3
    Actual arguments are evaluated expressions, not variables. Sep 3, 2014 at 17:08
  • for answering and providing a possible solution.
    – John C
    Jan 17, 2021 at 2:26

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