It is not possible to fire an event in C# that has no handlers attached to it. So before each call it is necessary to check if the event is null.
if ( MyEvent != null ) {
MyEvent( param1, param2 );
}
I would like to keep my code as clean as possible and get rid of those null checks. I don't think it will affect performance very much, at least not in my case.
MyEvent( param1, param2 );
Right now I solve this by adding an empty inline handler to each event manually. This is error prone, since I need to remember to do that etc.
void Initialize() {
MyEvent += new MyEvent( (p1,p2) => { } );
}
Is there a way to generate empty handlers for all events of a given class automatically using reflection and some CLR magic?
I saw this on another post and have shamelessly stolen it and used it in much of my code ever since:
public delegate void MyClickHandler(object sender, string myValue);
public event MyClickHandler Click = delegate {}; // add empty delegate!
//Let you do this:
public void DoSomething() {
Click(this, "foo");
}
//Instead of this:
public void DoSomething() {
if (Click != null) // Unnecessary!
Click(this, "foo");
}
* If anyone knows the origin of this technique, please post it in the comments. I really do believe in the source getting due credit.
(Edit: I got it from this post Hidden Features of C#?)