I have a class that Handles send & receive over a socket between my application and the network. This class uses other classes, including a low level sockket connection class and a PDU handler class that creates the messages to send and handles received data.
Now i use an event to signal my class that the low level connection class has data for it and i need to send that data to the PDU handler to convert to information the application can use and then hand the data to the application.
For future usage, i am trying to get the class to be as generic as possible, so that on future Server/Client projects i will need only to change the PDU handler to take under consideration the new operations availlable and how to handle the data.
All that is well underway and now i am facing the isssue of handing the data back to the app. For that, my logical approach is an event letting the app know data is ready for collection. For that i can either:
a) have one event and let the app sort out what kind of message it is through the operation code (doable)
b) Have one event per operation code and have the app subscribe to all of them and thus know at start what it is getting
Considering the idea of making things generic, and the approach stated in b, is there a way to dinamicly create events based on a given delegate signature at runtime?
e. g.
imagine you have opcodes in an enum called MyOperation1 and MyOperation2 and you have defined a delegate like:
public delegate void PDUEventHandler(ParamType Param, [...]);
and i want to define events called:
public event PDUEventHandler MyOperation1;
public event PDUEventHandler MyOperation2;
But if i add a new operation code i will need an event for it.
Can this events be created dinamicly or do i need to do it by hand?
If i need to do it by hand then i guess a single event would be better and handle things app side.
Perhaps what you need is a callback – essentially you pass to the event handler a delegate for it to execute when the handler is done. Here’s a stackoverflow thread to give you an idea
In terms of event handlers & re-useability, perhaps you can extend EventArgs and have that delegate as a property.
EDIT:
I was thinking a single
PDUEventHandlerhaving common code and a “hole” where custom code is run. That custom code is passed to the handler as a delegate (i.e. a method) or even a class instance. But let’s change that a little…Sounds like you need a factory. In fact you’re practically describing a factory.
Conceptually let go of the idea of passing special opcodes to an
EventHandlerper se, or having multi-signaturePDUEventHandlers.Create a
PDUHandlerFactoryclass. The factory returns a customized instance as a generalPDUHandlerclass reference. Then instead of a PDUEventHander you caller has aPDUHandlerreference that points to the factory-custom instance.