Friday, April 25, 2008
This is just a quick note with some linkage for anyone who is looking for an easy way to make Sharepoint look less like Sharepoint ;-)

Some sample master pages have been released and are available for download.   They are good examples for basing new master pages on, but also look good too!   For screen shots see the post on the Sharepoint Product Group blog.

I'm using the "Clarity" one now and like it

Also, check out the Templates available at the MOSS site.

Listening to:  ANZAC Day pipes and drums

Friday, April 25, 2008 4:56:26 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  | 
 Tuesday, April 01, 2008
This is the first in what I hope will become a series on the new language features in C# 3.0 used in .NET 3.5 / Visual Studio 2008.

One thing I am not intending to cover is LINQ.  Just because the blogosphere has been buzzing with LINQ articles since the early days of "Orcas".  And with good reason I hasten to add!

Where I am starting is with the var keyword.

VB6 veterans will remember the Variant type.  A Variant could contain anything, even Object.  While this was sort of useful, my memory of it is as a synonym for:  I can't be bothered, lets just stick it in a Variant and deal with it later.

There was also a performance impact of using the special Variant type, they were large in memory and have an overhead of extra runtime checking that added up; like when assigned inside a loop for example.  They were also a special case in their un-assigned form, taking on the value Empty (test with IsEmpty()) vs Nothing (test with Is Nothing). 

So when I saw var added to C# I raised my eyebrows in the way a Fed might, when the beagle sits quietly next to your suitcase at the airport.

Most of the time you see it in the samples, it is used when returning an Anonymous Type from a LINQ query.  And this is the clue!  var is not itself a type, but instead it is a signal to the compiler to infer the type of an operation, and substitute in the required type.  It does not even have to be an Anonymous Type.  Consider the following simple example:

var result = 10 / 2.0;
Console.WriteLine(result.ToString());

By the time this code is compiled, var is replaced with double.  In fact, the Intellisense on result will be correct for it being a double.

To confirm this, looking at those lines of the assembly in Lutz Roder's Reflector show the following after disassembly:

double result = 5.0;
Console.WriteLine(result.ToString());


OK, so var can be used independant of Anonymous Types, but why would you want to be less explicit in typing your variables?  Consider the following fictitious example:

DatabaseRequestService req = DatabaseRequestService.CreateFrom(value);

And compare it with the equivalent line using var:

var req = DatabaseRequestService.CreateFrom(value);

Here, var leads itself to much more readable syntax with the same typing, Intellisense, and everything else!

Listening To:  Róisín Murphy

Tuesday, April 01, 2008 9:25:00 PM (AUS Eastern Standard Time, UTC+10:00)  #    Disclaimer  |  Comments [0]  |