Difference between revisions of "Inserting Delegate Stubs in VS2012 (CS)"

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(Example)
(Example)
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}
 
}
 
</syntaxhighlight>
 
</syntaxhighlight>
* NOTE1: At this point we haven't yet provided the delegate stub, so intellisense marks ''myOnAction'' with red squiggles:
+
* Note1: At this point we haven't yet provided the delegate stub, so intellisense marks ''myOnAction'' with red squiggles:
 
*: [[image: MyOnActionRedSquiggles.png|link=]]
 
*: [[image: MyOnActionRedSquiggles.png|link=]]
 +
* Note2: Intellisense also provides us with the option to insert the delegate stub automatically:
 +
*: [[image: InsertDelegateStubCS.png|link=]]

Revision as of 17:00, 15 March 2013

Introduction

In Visual Studio 2012, you can automatically insert delegate stubs based on their signature in C#.

Example

Consider the simple example below:

  1. class SubscribeToDelegates
  2. {
  3.     rxCustomUI _customUI;
  4.  
  5.     public SubscribeToDelegates()
  6.     {
  7.         // Create a new customUI obj
  8.         _customUI = rxCustomUI.create("my_test_ctx");
  9.  
  10.         // Create a new button
  11.         rxButton myButton = new rxButton();
  12.  
  13.         // Create a new delegate of the correct signature
  14.         // NOTE1: We use class rxButtonDelegates to conveniently get the desired delegate type
  15.         // NOTE2: The delegate stub hasn't been provided at this point
  16.         var myDel = new rxButtonDelegates.onAction(MyOnAction);
  17.  
  18.         // Subscribe to the button's onAction delegate
  19.         myButton.onAction = _customUI.make_delegate(myDel);
  20.  
  21.     }
  22. }
  • Note1: At this point we haven't yet provided the delegate stub, so intellisense marks myOnAction with red squiggles:
    MyOnActionRedSquiggles.png
  • Note2: Intellisense also provides us with the option to insert the delegate stub automatically:
    InsertDelegateStubCS.png