mucking about with hashes...

So, I got a comment on the last post about hashes from lambdas (from Andrey Shchekin)... It pointed out the fact that you don't need to use expressions at all... which hilights an observation that I hadn't made myself - such that the lambda parameter names are available in the generated delegate... which of course makes perfect sense!

So given:

Func func = Name => "Value"; 

You can get the lambda parameter "Name" from the function delegate by calling:
func.Method.GetParameters()[0].Name // would return "Name" 

Here's the revised Hash method from Andrey:
public Dictionary Hash(params Func[] args)
where T : class {
var items = new Dictionary();
foreach (var func in args) {
var item = func(null);
items.Add(func.Method.GetParameters()[0].Name, item);
} return items;
}

Very elegant and simple :)

He even did some stats, which I suspect are probably a lot more accurate then my inital observations:

For 10000 consecutive calls:







WithAdd 10.0144ms
WithLambdas 9713.968ms
WithLambdasConstantsOnly 240.3456ms
WithDelegates 30.0432ms

Now what about multiple parameters... so far I can't think of any uses I would have for it... perhaps a 2 level configuration dictionary?
[Test]
public void HashTwoLevelDict()
{
Dictionary> config = this.Hash((Connection, DriverClass) => typeof(SqlClientDriver), (Dialect, DialectClass) => typeof(MsSql2000Dialect), (Connection, Provider) => typeof(DriverConnectionProvider), (Connection, ConnectionString) =>"Data Source=.;Initial Catalog=test;Integrated Security=SSPI");
Assert.AreEqual(typeof(SqlClientDriver), config["Connection"]["DriverClass"]);
}

Who knows... I look forward to seeing how Lambdas get used and abused for non-functional programming tasks :)

Written on June 11, 2007