I have this function that returns a reference type. Now, this function has two optional parameters both of which are instances of the DateTime
class. The function is something like this:
public DateTime GetDate(DateTime start = DateTime.MinValue, DateTime end = DateTime.MinValue)
{
// Method body...
}
The error from VS is:
Default parameter value for 'start' must be a compile-time constant
Of course, the error applies to the second parameter and I perfectly understand what is happening.
What I really want is to know if there is a way to go about this, that is, having optional parameters in the method. Right now, what I have done is to create an overload; I mean, I have created a parameterless function GetDate()
and a two-parameter overload of it.
This is not really a problem but I just want to know if there is a way to do it.
One workaround is to assign them like this:
public DateTime GetDate(DateTime? start = null, DateTime? end = null){
start = start ?? DateTime.MinValue;
end = end ?? DateTime.MinValue;
Console.WriteLine ("start: " + start);
Console.WriteLine ("end: " + end);
return DateTime.UtcNow;
}
Which can be used like this:
void Main()
{
new Test().GetDate();
new Test().GetDate(start: DateTime.UtcNow);
new Test().GetDate(end: DateTime.UtcNow);
new Test().GetDate(DateTime.UtcNow, DateTime.UtcNow);
}
And works just as expected:
start: 1/01/0001 0:00:00
end: 1/01/0001 0:00:00
start: 8/08/2014 17:30:29
end: 1/01/0001 0:00:00
start: 1/01/0001 0:00:00
end: 8/08/2014 17:30:29
start: 8/08/2014 17:30:29
end: 8/08/2014 17:30:29
Note the named parameter to distinguish between the start
and end
value.