Does anyone has a good solution for a C# version of the C++ __FUNCTION__ macro? The compiler does not seem to like it.
问题:
回答1:
Try using this instead.
System.Reflection.MethodBase.GetCurrentMethod().Name
C# doesn't have __LINE__
or __FUNCTION__
macros like C++ but there are equivalents
回答2:
What I currently use is a function like this:
using System.Diagnostics;
public string __Function() {
StackTrace stackTrace = new StackTrace();
return stackTrace.GetFrame(1).GetMethod().Name;
}
When I need __FUNCTION__, I just call the __Function() instead. For example:
Debug.Assert(false, __Function() + ": Unhandled option");
Of course this solution uses reflection too, but it is the best option I can find. Since I only use it for Debugging (not Tracing in release builds) the performance hit is not important.
I guess what I should do is create debug functions and tag them with
[ Conditional("Debug") ]
instead, but I haven't got around to that.
Thanks to Jeff Mastry for his solution to this.
回答3:
Unfortunately there is no equivalent version of that macro in C#. I don't consider the GetCurrentMethodName() solution equivalent to the C++ __FUNCTION__ macro. Namely becase the C++ version is a compile time computation of the name. For C# this is a runtime calculation and incurs a performance hit.
I'm not making any assumtions about the severity of the cost but there is one
回答4:
The following should work, although it will be evaluated at runtime instead of during compilation.
System.Reflection.MethodBase.GetCurrentMethod().Name
回答5:
This is added in .NET 4.5.
See @roken's answer here:
Do __LINE__ __FILE__ equivalents exist in C#?
回答6:
I use this:
public static string CallerName([CallerMemberName] string callerName = "")
{
return callerName;
}
Usage example:
s_log.DebugFormat("{0}", CallerName());
The down side of using it is that every time you want to print the caller name, you need to jump to the function ==> time consuming & performance hit! So, I use it for debugging perpose and if I need to print also in production code, I usually inline the function name into the log.Debug, e.g. :
s_log.Debug("CallerName");
HTH..