Skip to content
New issue

Have a question about this project? Sign up for a free GitHub account to open an issue and contact its maintainers and the community.

By clicking “Sign up for GitHub”, you agree to our terms of service and privacy statement. We’ll occasionally send you account related emails.

Already on GitHub? Sign in to your account

Feature Request: Make working with Generic Type Parameters Easier for classes with lots of Generics #11172

Closed
TonyValenti opened this issue May 8, 2016 · 3 comments

Comments

@TonyValenti
Copy link

It would be really nice if I could do something like a generic "typedef" using the syntax below.
I really like how this allows me to progressively specify type parameters to a class in a more readable fashion, however, I don't like that my final types end up being a "WithDriver" or a "WithLaser". Any suggestions or ideas?

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;

namespace ConsoleApplication17 {
    class Program {
        static void Main(string[] args) {
            var C = new Spaceship
                .WithDriver<int>
                ();

            var D = new Spaceship
                .WithEngine<String>
                .WithLasers<long>
                ();

        }
    }

    public class Spaceship : Spaceship<object, object, object> {    }

    public class Spaceship<TDriver, TEngine, TLasers> {

        public class WithDriver<TNewDriver> : Spaceship<TNewDriver, TEngine, TLasers> {
        }

        public class WithEngine<TNewEngine> : Spaceship<TDriver, TNewEngine, TLasers> {
        }

        public class WithLasers<TNewLasers> : Spaceship<TDriver, TEngine, TNewLasers> {
        }
    }
}
@dsaf
Copy link

dsaf commented May 9, 2016

As far as I understand the suggestion is to introduce named type arguments similarly to named method arguments:

var s = new Spaceship<TDriver:int, TEngine:string, TLasers:long>();

I see some value in this for generic types where arguments are not constrained in a meaningful way:

var d = new Dictionary<TKey:string, TValue:int>();

@alrz
Copy link
Member

alrz commented May 9, 2016

Related: #6207 #6248

@gafter
Copy link
Member

gafter commented Apr 21, 2017

We are now taking language feature discussion in other repositories:

Features that are under active design or development, or which are "championed" by someone on the language design team, have already been moved either as issues or as checked-in design documents. For example, the proposal in this repo "Proposal: Partial interface implementation a.k.a. Traits" (issue 16139 and a few other issues that request the same thing) are now tracked by the language team at issue 52 in https://github.com/dotnet/csharplang/issues, and there is a draft spec at https://github.com/dotnet/csharplang/blob/master/proposals/default-interface-methods.md and further discussion at issue 288 in https://github.com/dotnet/csharplang/issues. Prototyping of the compiler portion of language features is still tracked here; see, for example, https://github.com/dotnet/roslyn/tree/features/DefaultInterfaceImplementation and issue 17952.

In order to facilitate that transition, we have started closing language design discussions from the roslyn repo with a note briefly explaining why. When we are aware of an existing discussion for the feature already in the new repo, we are adding a link to that. But we're not adding new issues to the new repos for existing discussions in this repo that the language design team does not currently envision taking on. Our intent is to eventually close the language design issues in the Roslyn repo and encourage discussion in one of the new repos instead.

Our intent is not to shut down discussion on language design - you can still continue discussion on the closed issues if you want - but rather we would like to encourage people to move discussion to where we are more likely to be paying attention (the new repo), or to abandon discussions that are no longer of interest to you.

If you happen to notice that one of the closed issues has a relevant issue in the new repo, and we have not added a link to the new issue, we would appreciate you providing a link from the old to the new discussion. That way people who are still interested in the discussion can start paying attention to the new issue.

Also, we'd welcome any ideas you might have on how we could better manage the transition. Comments and discussion about closing and/or moving issues should be directed to #18002. Comments and discussion about this issue can take place here or on an issue in the relevant repo.


I am closing this issue because discussion appears to have died down. You are welcome to open a new issue in the csharplang repo if you would like to kick-start discussion again.

@gafter gafter closed this as completed Apr 21, 2017
Sign up for free to join this conversation on GitHub. Already have an account? Sign in to comment
Projects
None yet
Development

No branches or pull requests

4 participants