[Evolution in aciton] C#1.1=>2.0=>3.0 [Querying Collections]

If want filter out a price greater than $10 ,in the products. we need to loop around,testing each element and printing it out where appropriate.

image 

Looping ,testing,printing out
C#1.1

static void Main()
        
{
            ArrayList products 
= Product.GetSampleProducts();
            
foreach (Product product in products)
            
{
                
if (product.Price > 10m)
                
{
                    Console.WriteLine(product);
                }

            }

        }
 

The dependency is obvious because of the nesting.

C#2.0 Lets us flatten things out a bit

 static void Main()
        
{
            
//Get Products and Save to List<T>
            List<Product> products = Product.GetSampleProducts();
            
//Define filter 
            Predicate<Product> filterPrice = delegate(Product product)
            
{
                
return product.Price >
 10m;
            }
;
            
//FindAll this in List<Product>

            List<Product> matchPrice = products.FindAll(filterPrice); 

            
//Define print out

           Action<Product> printPrices = delegate(Product product)
            
{
                Console.WriteLine(product);
            }


            matchPrice.ForEach(printPrices);

        }
 

In particular, it makes it very easy to change the condition we're testing for and the aciton we take on each of the matchs independently.

* The FindAll and ForEach methods in C#2.0 just help to encourage you to consider separation of concerns.

So, we could have put all the testing and printing into one statment.[C#2.0]

static void Main()
       
{
           List
<Product> products = Product.GetSampleProducts();
           products.FindAll(
delegate(Product p) 

                                        
return p.Price > 10; }
)
                         .ForEach(
delegate
(Product p) 

                                       
{ Console.WriteLine(p); }


                                      );
       }



That's a bit better, But it is getting in the way Developer , and adding noise to the code, which hurts readability. I still prefer the C#1.1 version.


C#3.0
            improves matters dramatically by removing a lot of the fluff surrounding the actual logic of the delegate.

 static void Main()
        
{
            List
<Product> products = Product.GetSampleProducts();
            
foreach (Product product in products.Where(p => p.Price > 10))
            
{
                Console.WriteLine(product);
            }

        }

So much For this!
原文地址:https://www.cnblogs.com/RuiLei/p/1164701.html