I want to be able to write extension methods so that I can say:
lines.ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs();
instead of:
lines = lines.ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs();
However, the following code currently outputs:
....one
........two
instead of:
Tone
TTtwo
What do I have to change in the following code to make it output:
Tone
TTtwo
(note that for visibility, . = space, T = \t
):
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
namespace TestExtended82343
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
List<string> lines = new List<string>();
lines.Add("....one");
lines.Add("........two");
lines.ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs();
lines.ForEach(l => Console.WriteLine(l));
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
public static class Helpers
{
public static void ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs(this List<string> originalLines)
{
string spaceGroup = new String('.', 4);
List<string> lines = new List<string>();
foreach (var originalLine in originalLines)
{
lines.Add(originalLin开发者_JS百科e.Replace(spaceGroup, "T"));
}
originalLines = lines;
}
}
}
You have to modify the contents of the List<string>
passed to the extension method, not the variable that holds the reference to the list:
public static void ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs(this List<string> lines)
{
string spaceGroup = new String('.', 4);
for (int i = 0; i < lines.Count; i++)
{
lines[i] = lines[i].Replace(spaceGroup, "T");
}
}
You'd have to change the contents of the original list - just reassigning the parameter to have a different value isn't going to do it. Something like this:
public static void ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs(this List<string> lines)
{
string spaceGroup = new String('.', 4);
for (int i = 0; i < lines.Count; i++)
{
lines[i] = lines[i].Replace(spaceGroup, "T");
}
}
It's worth noting that this has nothing to do with extension methods. Imagine you'd just called:
Helpers.ForceSpaceGroupsToBeTabs(lines);
... because that's what the code is effectively translated into. There's nothing special about the fact that it's an extension method; if you change the code so that the "normal" static method will work, then it'll work as an extension method too. As noted in the comments, one thing you can't do with an extension method is make the first parameter a ref
parameter.
(EDIT: I realise this is the exact same code that dtb posted, although we arrived there independently. I'm keeping this answer anyway, as it's got more than code.)
If it's a reference type, you'd have to change it's contents. If it's a value type you're passing in, you're out of luck. The very existence of extension methods is put into place to support functional paradigms in C#, and those functional paradigms, by their very essence, tend towards immutability of types, hence the inability to change the value off of which the extension method is called.
In other words, while you could do it, it may not be in keeping with the "spirit" of functional programming.
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