DynamicObject.TrySetMember(SetMemberBinder, Object) Method
Definition
Important
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Provides the implementation for operations that set member values. Classes derived from the DynamicObject class can override this method to specify dynamic behavior for operations such as setting a value for a property.
public:
virtual bool TrySetMember(System::Dynamic::SetMemberBinder ^ binder, System::Object ^ value);
public virtual bool TrySetMember (System.Dynamic.SetMemberBinder binder, object value);
public virtual bool TrySetMember (System.Dynamic.SetMemberBinder binder, object? value);
abstract member TrySetMember : System.Dynamic.SetMemberBinder * obj -> bool
override this.TrySetMember : System.Dynamic.SetMemberBinder * obj -> bool
Public Overridable Function TrySetMember (binder As SetMemberBinder, value As Object) As Boolean
Parameters
- binder
- SetMemberBinder
Provides information about the object that called the dynamic operation. The binder.Name
property provides the name of the member to which the value is being assigned. For example, for the statement sampleObject.SampleProperty = "Test"
, where sampleObject
is an instance of the class derived from the DynamicObject class, binder.Name
returns "SampleProperty". The binder.IgnoreCase
property specifies whether the member name is case-sensitive.
- value
- Object
The value to set to the member. For example, for sampleObject.SampleProperty = "Test"
, where sampleObject
is an instance of the class derived from the DynamicObject class, the value
is "Test".
Returns
true
if the operation is successful; otherwise, false
. If this method returns false
, the run-time binder of the language determines the behavior. (In most cases, a language-specific run-time exception is thrown.)
Examples
Assume that you want to provide alternative syntax for accessing values in a dictionary, so that instead of writing sampleDictionary["Text"] = "Sample text"
(sampleDictionary("Text") = "Sample text"
in Visual Basic), you can write sampleDictionary.Text = "Sample text"
. Also, this syntax must be case-insensitive, so that sampleDictionary.Text
is equivalent to sampleDictionary.text
.
The following code example demonstrates the DynamicDictionary
class, which is derived from the DynamicObject class. The DynamicDictionary
class contains an object of the Dictionary<string, object>
type (Dictionary(Of String, Object)
in Visual Basic) to store the key-value pairs, and overrides the TrySetMember and TryGetMember methods to support the new syntax. It also provides a Count
property, which shows how many dynamic properties the dictionary contains.
// The class derived from DynamicObject.
public class DynamicDictionary : DynamicObject
{
// The inner dictionary.
Dictionary<string, object> dictionary
= new Dictionary<string, object>();
// This property returns the number of elements
// in the inner dictionary.
public int Count
{
get
{
return dictionary.Count;
}
}
// If you try to get a value of a property
// not defined in the class, this method is called.
public override bool TryGetMember(
GetMemberBinder binder, out object result)
{
// Converting the property name to lowercase
// so that property names become case-insensitive.
string name = binder.Name.ToLower();
// If the property name is found in a dictionary,
// set the result parameter to the property value and return true.
// Otherwise, return false.
return dictionary.TryGetValue(name, out result);
}
// If you try to set a value of a property that is
// not defined in the class, this method is called.
public override bool TrySetMember(
SetMemberBinder binder, object value)
{
// Converting the property name to lowercase
// so that property names become case-insensitive.
dictionary[binder.Name.ToLower()] = value;
// You can always add a value to a dictionary,
// so this method always returns true.
return true;
}
}
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// Creating a dynamic dictionary.
dynamic person = new DynamicDictionary();
// Adding new dynamic properties.
// The TrySetMember method is called.
person.FirstName = "Ellen";
person.LastName = "Adams";
// Getting values of the dynamic properties.
// The TryGetMember method is called.
// Note that property names are case-insensitive.
Console.WriteLine(person.firstname + " " + person.lastname);
// Getting the value of the Count property.
// The TryGetMember is not called,
// because the property is defined in the class.
Console.WriteLine(
"Number of dynamic properties:" + person.Count);
// The following statement throws an exception at run time.
// There is no "address" property,
// so the TryGetMember method returns false and this causes a
// RuntimeBinderException.
// Console.WriteLine(person.address);
}
}
// This example has the following output:
// Ellen Adams
// Number of dynamic properties: 2
' The class derived from DynamicObject.
Public Class DynamicDictionary
Inherits DynamicObject
' The inner dictionary.
Dim dictionary As New Dictionary(Of String, Object)
' This property returns the number of elements
' in the inner dictionary.
ReadOnly Property Count As Integer
Get
Return dictionary.Count
End Get
End Property
' If you try to get a value of a property that is
' not defined in the class, this method is called.
Public Overrides Function TryGetMember(
ByVal binder As System.Dynamic.GetMemberBinder,
ByRef result As Object) As Boolean
' Converting the property name to lowercase
' so that property names become case-insensitive.
Dim name As String = binder.Name.ToLower()
' If the property name is found in a dictionary,
' set the result parameter to the property value and return true.
' Otherwise, return false.
Return dictionary.TryGetValue(name, result)
End Function
Public Overrides Function TrySetMember(
ByVal binder As System.Dynamic.SetMemberBinder,
ByVal value As Object) As Boolean
' Converting the property name to lowercase
' so that property names become case-insensitive.
dictionary(binder.Name.ToLower()) = value
' You can always add a value to a dictionary,
' so this method always returns true.
Return True
End Function
End Class
Sub Main()
' Creating a dynamic dictionary.
Dim person As Object = New DynamicDictionary()
' Adding new dynamic properties.
' The TrySetMember method is called.
person.FirstName = "Ellen"
person.LastName = "Adams"
' Getting values of the dynamic properties.
' The TryGetMember method is called.
' Note that property names are now case-insensitive,
' although they are case-sensitive in C#.
Console.WriteLine(person.firstname & " " & person.lastname)
' Getting the value of the Count property.
' The TryGetMember is not called,
' because the property is defined in the class.
Console.WriteLine("Number of dynamic properties:" & person.Count)
' The following statement throws an exception at run time.
' There is no "address" property,
' so the TryGetMember method returns false and this causes
' a MissingMemberException.
' Console.WriteLine(person.address)
End Sub
' This examples has the following output:
' Ellen Adams
' Number of dynamic properties: 2
Remarks
Classes derived from the DynamicObject class can override this method to specify how operations that set a value to a member should be performed for a dynamic object. When the method is not overridden, the run-time binder of the language determines the behavior. (In most cases, a language-specific run-time exception is thrown.)
This method is called when you have statements like sampleObject.SampleProperty = "Test"
, where sampleObject
is an instance of the class that is derived from the DynamicObject class.
You can also add your own members to classes derived from the DynamicObject
class. If your class defines properties and also overrides the TrySetMember method, the dynamic language runtime (DLR) first uses the language binder to look for a static definition of a property in the class. If there is no such property, the DLR calls the TrySetMember method.