with expression - Nondestructive mutation creates a new object with modified properties
A with
expression produces a copy of its operand with the specified properties and fields modified. You use the object initializer syntax to specify what members to modify and their new values:
using System;
public class WithExpressionBasicExample
{
public record NamedPoint(string Name, int X, int Y);
public static void Main()
{
var p1 = new NamedPoint("A", 0, 0);
Console.WriteLine($"{nameof(p1)}: {p1}"); // output: p1: NamedPoint { Name = A, X = 0, Y = 0 }
var p2 = p1 with { Name = "B", X = 5 };
Console.WriteLine($"{nameof(p2)}: {p2}"); // output: p2: NamedPoint { Name = B, X = 5, Y = 0 }
var p3 = p1 with
{
Name = "C",
Y = 4
};
Console.WriteLine($"{nameof(p3)}: {p3}"); // output: p3: NamedPoint { Name = C, X = 0, Y = 4 }
Console.WriteLine($"{nameof(p1)}: {p1}"); // output: p1: NamedPoint { Name = A, X = 0, Y = 0 }
var apples = new { Item = "Apples", Price = 1.19m };
Console.WriteLine($"Original: {apples}"); // output: Original: { Item = Apples, Price = 1.19 }
var saleApples = apples with { Price = 0.79m };
Console.WriteLine($"Sale: {saleApples}"); // output: Sale: { Item = Apples, Price = 0.79 }
}
}
The left-hand operand of a with
expression can be of a record type. Beginning with C# 10, a left-hand operand of a with
expression can also be of a structure type or an anonymous type.
The result of a with
expression has the same run-time type as the expression's operand, as the following example shows:
using System;
public class InheritanceExample
{
public record Point(int X, int Y);
public record NamedPoint(string Name, int X, int Y) : Point(X, Y);
public static void Main()
{
Point p1 = new NamedPoint("A", 0, 0);
Point p2 = p1 with { X = 5, Y = 3 };
Console.WriteLine(p2 is NamedPoint); // output: True
Console.WriteLine(p2); // output: NamedPoint { X = 5, Y = 3, Name = A }
}
}
In the case of a reference-type member, only the reference to a member instance is copied when an operand is copied. Both the copy and original operand have access to the same reference-type instance. The following example demonstrates that behavior:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class ExampleWithReferenceType
{
public record TaggedNumber(int Number, List<string> Tags)
{
public string PrintTags() => string.Join(", ", Tags);
}
public static void Main()
{
var original = new TaggedNumber(1, new List<string> { "A", "B" });
var copy = original with { Number = 2 };
Console.WriteLine($"Tags of {nameof(copy)}: {copy.PrintTags()}");
// output: Tags of copy: A, B
original.Tags.Add("C");
Console.WriteLine($"Tags of {nameof(copy)}: {copy.PrintTags()}");
// output: Tags of copy: A, B, C
}
}
Custom copy semantics
Any record class type has the copy constructor. A copy constructor is a constructor with a single parameter of the containing record type. It copies the state of its argument to a new record instance. At evaluation of a with
expression, the copy constructor gets called to instantiate a new record instance based on an original record. After that, the new instance gets updated according to the specified modifications. By default, the copy constructor is implicit, that is, compiler-generated. If you need to customize the record copy semantics, explicitly declare a copy constructor with the desired behavior. The following example updates the preceding example with an explicit copy constructor. The new copy behavior is to copy list items instead of a list reference when a record is copied:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class UserDefinedCopyConstructorExample
{
public record TaggedNumber(int Number, List<string> Tags)
{
protected TaggedNumber(TaggedNumber original)
{
Number = original.Number;
Tags = new List<string>(original.Tags);
}
public string PrintTags() => string.Join(", ", Tags);
}
public static void Main()
{
var original = new TaggedNumber(1, new List<string> { "A", "B" });
var copy = original with { Number = 2 };
Console.WriteLine($"Tags of {nameof(copy)}: {copy.PrintTags()}");
// output: Tags of copy: A, B
original.Tags.Add("C");
Console.WriteLine($"Tags of {nameof(copy)}: {copy.PrintTags()}");
// output: Tags of copy: A, B
}
}
You can't customize the copy semantics for structure types.
C# language specification
For more information, see the following sections of the records feature proposal note: