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问题:
This is a silly question, but you can use this code to check if something is a particular type...
if (child is IContainer) { //....
Is there a more elegant way to check for the "NOT" instance?
if (!(child is IContainer)) { //A little ugly... silly, yes I know...
//these don't work :)
if (child !is IContainer) {
if (child isnt IContainer) {
if (child aint IContainer) {
if (child isnotafreaking IContainer) {
Yes, yes... silly question....
Because there is some question on what the code looks like, it's just a simple return at the start of a method.
public void Update(DocumentPart part) {
part.Update();
if (!(DocumentPart is IContainer)) { return; }
foreach(DocumentPart child in ((IContainer)part).Children) {
//...etc...
回答1:
if(!(child is IContainer))
is the only operator to go (there's no IsNot
operator).
You can build an extension method that does it:
public static bool IsA<T>(this object obj) {
return obj is T;
}
and then use it to:
if (!child.IsA<IContainer>())
And you could follow on your theme:
public static bool IsNotAFreaking<T>(this object obj) {
return !(obj is T);
}
if (child.IsNotAFreaking<IContainer>()) { // ...
Update (considering the OP's code snippet):
Since you're actually casting the value afterward, you could just use as
instead:
public void Update(DocumentPart part) {
part.Update();
IContainer containerPart = part as IContainer;
if(containerPart == null) return;
foreach(DocumentPart child in containerPart.Children) { // omit the cast.
//...etc...
回答2:
You can do it this way:
object a = new StreamWriter("c:\\temp\\test.txt");
if (a is TextReader == false)
{
Console.WriteLine("failed");
}
回答3:
Why not just use the else ?
if (child is IContainer)
{
//
}
else
{
// Do what you want here
}
Its neat it familiar and simple ?
回答4:
The way you have it is fine but you could create a set of extension methods to make "a more elegant way to check for the 'NOT' instance."
public static bool Is<T>(this object myObject)
{
return (myObject is T);
}
public static bool IsNot<T>(this object myObject)
{
return !(myObject is T);
}
Then you could write:
if (child.IsNot<IContainer>())
{
// child is not an IContainer
}
回答5:
Ugly? I disagree. The only other way (I personally think this is "uglier"):
var obj = child as IContainer;
if(obj == null)
{
//child "aint" IContainer
}
回答6:
The is
operator evaluates to a boolean result, so you can do anything you would otherwise be able to do on a bool. To negate it use the !
operator. Why would you want to have a different operator just for this?
回答7:
While the IS operator is normally the best way, there is an alternative that you can use in some cirumstances. You can use the as operator and test for null.
MyClass mc = foo as MyClass;
if ( mc == null ) { }
else {}
回答8:
The extension method IsNot<T>
is a nice way to extend the syntax. Keep in mind
var container = child as IContainer;
if(container != null)
{
// do something w/ contianer
}
performs better than doing something like
if(child is IContainer)
{
var container = child as IContainer;
// do something w/ container
}
In your case, it doesn't matter as you are returning from the method. In other words, be careful to not do both the check for type and then the type conversion immediately after.
回答9:
While this doesn't avoid the problem of parentheses, for the sake of people getting here via Google, it should be mentioned that newer syntax exists (as of C# 7) to make the rest of your code a little cleaner:
if (!(DocumentPart is IContainer container)) { return; }
foreach(DocumentPart child in container.Children) {
...
This avoids the double-cast, the null-check, and having a variable available in scopes where it could be null.
回答10:
if (child is IContainer ? false : true)