What’s New in C# 5.0 - Learn about CallerMemberName Attribute
C# 5.0 comes with Visual Studio 2012 and .NET Framework 4.5. Currently it is in RC (Release Candidate) mode and will get the final RTM versi...- Article authored by Kunal Chowdhury on .
C# 5.0 comes with Visual Studio 2012 and .NET Framework 4.5. Currently it is in RC (Release Candidate) mode and will get the final RTM versi...- Article authored by Kunal Chowdhury on .
C# 5.0 comes with Visual Studio 2012 and .NET Framework 4.5. Currently it is in RC (Release Candidate) mode and will get the final RTM version soon. In our last CSharp blog post “Evolution of C# (1.0 – 5.0)”, we learned about the evolution of C# and also we also came to know about the main features introduced in each C# version.
Today in this post, we will learn about one new attribute that has been introduced in C# 5.0 named “CallerMemberName” for developers. Yes, it is for developers to trace the information about the caller code. Let’s begin discussing about it.
[CallerMemberName] is an attribute introduced in C# 5.0, which allows you to obtain the method or property name of the caller to the method. You can find this attribute named “CallerMemberNameAttribute” under the namespace System.Runtime.CompilerServices.
You can use the [CallerMemberName] attribute to avoid specifying the member name as a String argument to the called method. This is especially useful for the following tasks:
The following table shows the member names that are returned when you use the [CallerMemberName] attribute:
Origin | Member Name Result |
Method, property or event | The name of the method, property or event |
Constructor | The string ".ctor" |
Static constructor | The string ".cctor" |
Destructor | The string "Finalize" |
User-defined operators or conversions | The generated name for the member |
Attribute constructor | The name of the member to which the attribute is applied |
No containing member | The default value of the optional parameter |
Remember that, you can apply the [CallerMemberName] attribute to an optional parameter that has a default value. You must specify an explicit default value for the optional parameter. You can't apply this attribute to parameters that aren't specified as optional.
I hope, you understood the new attribute named CallerMemberName introduced in C# 5.0. Let’s see it in action by following a sample code. First of all, create a console application targeting .NET 4.5 Framework. Now for this example, we will create a static class named “Trace” for our example and add a new static method named “Write” with an optional parameter “memberName”.
As shown below, mark the optional parameter with [CallerMemberName” attribute:
The method implementation will print the member name as demonstrated above using the Console.WriteLine() method.
Now let us open our main “Program” class and introduce a new property. The setter of the property will call the method Trace.Write(). Now we will first call the said method from the Main() method and then we will set the property value as shown below:
When you run the above code, it will first call the Trace.Write() method from the Main() and print the name of the Main() method in the output screen. Now, it will set the property value and the setter method inside the property will print the name of the property in the screen.
Here is the console output screen of the above code:
I hope that the functionality of the above attribute is clear to you now. You can now think of the use of this attribute in your code to trace the caller of the executed line. If you have further question, just drop a line below and I will try to answer you as soon as possible.
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