TypeBuilder.MakePointerType Method
Definition
Important
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Returns a Type object that represents the type of an unmanaged pointer to the current type.
public:
override Type ^ MakePointerType();
public override Type MakePointerType ();
override this.MakePointerType : unit -> Type
Public Overrides Function MakePointerType () As Type
Returns
A Type object that represents the type of an unmanaged pointer to the current type.
Examples
The following code example creates a dynamic module, an abstract type named Sample
, and an abstract method named TestMethod
. TestMethod
takes a ref
parameter (ByRef
in Visual Basic) of type Sample
, a pointer to type Sample
, and an array of type Sample
. It returns a two-dimensional array of type Sample
. The code example saves the dynamic module to disk, so you can examine it with the Ildasm.exe (IL Disassembler).
using System;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Reflection.Emit;
using Microsoft.VisualBasic;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
// Define a dynamic assembly to contain the sample type. The
// assembly will not be run, but only saved to disk, so
// AssemblyBuilderAccess.Save is specified.
//
AppDomain myDomain = AppDomain.CurrentDomain;
AssemblyName myAsmName = new AssemblyName("MakeXxxTypeExample");
AssemblyBuilder myAssembly = myDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly(
myAsmName,
AssemblyBuilderAccess.Save);
// An assembly is made up of executable modules. For a single-
// module assembly, the module name and file name are the same
// as the assembly name.
//
ModuleBuilder myModule = myAssembly.DefineDynamicModule(
myAsmName.Name,
myAsmName.Name + ".dll");
// Define the sample type.
TypeBuilder myType = myModule.DefineType(
"Sample",
TypeAttributes.Public | TypeAttributes.Abstract);
// Define a method that takes a ref argument of type Sample,
// a pointer to type Sample, and an array of Sample objects. The
// method returns a two-dimensional array of Sample objects.
//
// To create this method, you need Type objects that represent the
// parameter types and the return type. Use the MakeByRefType,
// MakePointerType, and MakeArrayType methods to create the Type
// objects.
//
Type byRefMyType = myType.MakeByRefType();
Type pointerMyType = myType.MakePointerType();
Type arrayMyType = myType.MakeArrayType();
Type twoDimArrayMyType = myType.MakeArrayType(2);
// Create the array of parameter types.
Type[] parameterTypes = {byRefMyType, pointerMyType, arrayMyType};
// Define the abstract Test method. After you have compiled
// and run this code example code, you can use ildasm.exe
// to open MakeXxxTypeExample.dll, examine the Sample type,
// and verify the parameter types and return type of the
// TestMethod method.
//
MethodBuilder myMethodBuilder = myType.DefineMethod(
"TestMethod",
MethodAttributes.Abstract | MethodAttributes.Virtual
| MethodAttributes.Public,
twoDimArrayMyType,
parameterTypes);
// Create the type and save the assembly. For a single-file
// assembly, there is only one module to store the manifest
// information in.
//
myType.CreateType();
myAssembly.Save(myAsmName.Name + ".dll");
}
}
Imports System.Reflection
Imports System.Reflection.Emit
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Define a dynamic assembly to contain the sample type. The
' assembly will not be run, but only saved to disk, so
' AssemblyBuilderAccess.Save is specified.
'
Dim myDomain As AppDomain = AppDomain.CurrentDomain
Dim myAsmName As New AssemblyName("MakeXxxTypeExample")
Dim myAssembly As AssemblyBuilder = myDomain.DefineDynamicAssembly( _
myAsmName, _
AssemblyBuilderAccess.Save)
' An assembly is made up of executable modules. For a single-
' module assembly, the module name and file name are the same
' as the assembly name.
'
Dim myModule As ModuleBuilder = myAssembly.DefineDynamicModule( _
myAsmName.Name, _
myAsmName.Name & ".dll")
' Define the sample type.
Dim myType As TypeBuilder = myModule.DefineType( _
"Sample", _
TypeAttributes.Public Or TypeAttributes.Abstract)
' Define a method that takes a ByRef argument of type Sample,
' a pointer to type Sample, and an array of Sample objects. The
' method returns a two-dimensional array of Sample objects.
'
' To create this method, you need Type objects that represent the
' parameter types and the return type. Use the MakeByRefType,
' MakePointerType, and MakeArrayType methods to create the Type
' objects.
'
Dim byRefMyType As Type = myType.MakeByRefType
Dim pointerMyType As Type = myType.MakePointerType
Dim arrayMyType As Type = myType.MakeArrayType
Dim twoDimArrayMyType As Type = myType.MakeArrayType(2)
' Create the array of parameter types.
Dim parameterTypes() As Type = _
{byRefMyType, pointerMyType, arrayMyType}
' Define the abstract Test method. After you have compiled
' and run this code example code, you can use ildasm.exe
' to open MakeXxxTypeExample.dll, examine the Sample type,
' and verify the parameter types and return type of the
' TestMethod method.
'
Dim myMethodBuilder As MethodBuilder = myType.DefineMethod( _
"TestMethod", _
MethodAttributes.Abstract Or MethodAttributes.Virtual _
Or MethodAttributes.Public, _
twoDimArrayMyType, _
parameterTypes)
' Create the type and save the assembly. For a single-file
' assembly, there is only one module to store the manifest
' information in.
'
myType.CreateType()
myAssembly.Save(myAsmName.Name & ".dll")
End Sub
End Class
Remarks
The MakePointerType method provides a way to generate pointer types for parameter lists.
Note
Using Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL) syntax, if the current TypeBuilder represents MyType
, then the type returned by this method would be MyType*
.