# Named Arguments
# Argument order is not necessary
You can place named arguments in any order you want.
Sample Method:
public static string Sample(string left, string right)
{
return string.Join("-",left,right);
}
Call Sample:
Console.WriteLine (Sample(left:"A",right:"B"));
Console.WriteLine (Sample(right:"A",left:"B"));
Results:
A-B
B-A
# Named Arguments can make your code more clear
Consider this simple class:
class SmsUtil
{
public bool SendMessage(string from, string to, string message, int retryCount, object attachment)
{
// Some code
}
}
Before C# 3.0 it was:
var result = SmsUtil.SendMessage("Mehran", "Maryam", "Hello there!", 12, null);
you can make this method call even more clear with named arguments:
var result = SmsUtil.SendMessage(
from: "Mehran",
to: "Maryam",
message "Hello there!",
retryCount: 12,
attachment: null);
# Named arguments and optional paramaters
You can combine named arguments with optional parameters.
Let see this method:
public sealed class SmsUtil
{
public static bool SendMessage(string from, string to, string message, int retryCount = 5, object attachment = null)
{
// Some code
}
}
When you want to call this method without set retryCount
argument :
var result = SmsUtil.SendMessage(
from : "Cihan",
to : "Yakar",
message : "Hello there!",
attachment : new object());
# Named Arguments avoids bugs on optional parameters
Always use Named Arguments to optional parameters, to avoid potential bugs when the method is modified.
class Employee
{
public string Name { get; private set; }
public string Title { get; set; }
public Employee(string name = "<No Name>", string title = "<No Title>")
{
this.Name = name;
this.Title = title;
}
}
var jack = new Employee("Jack", "Associate"); //bad practice in this line
The above code compiles and works fine, until the constructor is changed some day like:
//Evil Code: add optional parameters between existing optional parameters
public Employee(string name = "<No Name>", string department = "intern", string title = "<No Title>")
{
this.Name = name;
this.Department = department;
this.Title = title;
}
//the below code still compiles, but now "Associate" is an argument of "department"
var jack = new Employee("Jack", "Associate");
Best practice to avoid bugs when "someone else in the team" made mistakes:
var jack = new Employee(name: "Jack", title: "Associate");