Click here to Skip to main content
15,881,709 members
Articles / Programming Languages / C#

Enums, Flags, and C# — Oh My! (Bad Pun…)

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
4.88/5 (64 votes)
3 Sep 2009CC (ASA 2.5)3 min read 128K   120   39
How you can use Enumerated types and the Flag Attribute along with Extension Methods to make your code more compact and easier to understand

I’m not sure about everyone else, but I just love Enumerated types. What's more, I love the Flags Attribute when you combine them together. This post explores how you can use these two things along with Extension Methods to make your code more compact and easier to understand.

If you’ve never used this combination before, then you’re missing out. Consider the following code…

C#
class User {
    bool CanDelete;
    bool CanRead;
    bool CanWrite;
    bool CanModify;
    bool CanCreate;
}

Okay, so that’s no big deal even though it may be quite a few extra lines of code. It would be nice to be able to combine all of those permissions into a single value. That’s where an Enumerated Type with a FlagAttribute comes in.

C#
enum PermissionTypes : int {
    None = 0,
    Read = 1,
    Write = 2,
    Modify = 4,
    Delete = 8
    Create = 16,
    All = Read | Write | Modify | Delete | Create
}

//and the class from before
class User {
    PermissionTypes Permissions = PermissionTypes.None;
}

Excellent…. So Now What?

So now, what's great about this is we can assign multiple values onto the same property. Not only that, we can also check for existing values with a (strange) comparison.

C#
//create a new user
User admin = new User();
admin.Permissions = PermissionTypes.Read
    | PermissionTypes.Write
    | PermissionTypes.Delete;

//check for permissions
bool canRead = ((PermissionTypes.Read & admin.Permissions) == PermissionTypes.Read);
bool canWrite = ((PermissionTypes.Write & admin.Permissions) == PermissionTypes.Write);
bool canCreate = ((PermissionTypes.Create & admin.Permissions) == PermissionTypes.Create);

//and the results
Console.WriteLine(canRead); //true
Console.WriteLine(canWrite); //true
Console.WriteLine(canCreate); //false

Now shorter and easier to read — sorta. See that really odd comparison? That’s what you need to write each time you want to check for a value. It’s not that bad, but it isn’t really something I’d like to type very often. You could write a separate function to do these comparisons for you, but we can do even better than that.

Taking Advantage of Extension Methods

Since an Enumerated Type isn’t really a class, you can’t extend methods onto them. However, you can extend methods onto the class System.Enum. Methods added to this class will appear in the methods for all of your enumerated types!

Here is an example method…

C#
//full class included at the end of the post
public static class EnumerationExtensions {

    //checks to see if an enumerated value contains a type
    public static bool Has<T>(this System.Enum type, T value) {
        try {
            return (((int)(object)type & 
              (int)(object)value) == (int)(object)value);
        }
        catch {
            return false;
        }
    }
}

Now, this code does make an assumption that it can cast your Enumerated Type to an integer. You could do some type checking before you do the comparisons, but for the sake of this example, we’re going to keep this short.

So, just how do you use this extension?

C#
//start with a value
PermissionTypes permissions = PermissionTypes.Read | PermissionTypes.Write;

//then check for the values
bool canRead = permissions.Has(PermissionTypes.Read); //true
bool canWrite = permissions.Has(PermissionTypes.Write); //true
bool canDelete = permissions.Has(PermissionTypes.Delete); //false

Now, that is much easier to read! Even better, you’ll notice despite the fact this has a Generic parameter, we don’t have to provide the type at the start since the method can infer it from the parameter (implicitly typed parameters — sweeeeet!).

And don’t forget, System.Enum isn’t the only class you can do this with, there are other classes (like System.Array, for example) that you can add your own extension methods to for surprising results!

As I stated before, this doesn't cover all cases of what you could expect - this code should be modified depending on how you plan to use it. For example, if you're using long, uint, ulong, this code won't cover all of your cases.

You may also wonder why we cast to an object before we cast to an int. When you're working with Generics, you can't cast to a value (non-nullable) type immediately, you have to either cast to an object and then to a value type, or just cast directly to a nullable value type, such as int.

Below is the full source code for the EnumerationExtensions class. If you have any improvements, please let me know! I'm currently working on a revised version to improve this code.

C#
namespace Enum.Extensions {

    public static class EnumerationExtensions {

        //checks if the value contains the provided type
        public static bool Has<T>(this System.Enum type, T value) {
            try {
                return (((int)(object)type & (int)(object)value) == (int)(object)value);
            }
            catch {
                return false;
            }
        }

        //checks if the value is only the provided type
        public static bool Is<T>(this System.Enum type, T value) {
            try {
                return (int)(object)type == (int)(object)value;
            }
            catch {
                return false;
            }
        }

        //appends a value
        public static T Add<T>(this System.Enum type, T value) {
            try {
                return (T)(object)(((int)(object)type | (int)(object)value));
            }
            catch(Exception ex) {
                throw new ArgumentException(
                    string.Format(
                        "Could not append value from enumerated type '{0}'.",
                        typeof(T).Name
                        ), ex);
            }
        }

        //completely removes the value
        public static T Remove<T>(this System.Enum type, T value) {
            try {
                return (T)(object)(((int)(object)type & ~(int)(object)value));
            }
            catch (Exception ex) {
                throw new ArgumentException(
                    string.Format(
                        "Could not remove value from enumerated type '{0}'.",
                        typeof(T).Name
                        ), ex);
            }
        }
    }
}

License

This article, along with any associated source code and files, is licensed under The Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 2.5 License


Written By
United States United States
This member has not yet provided a Biography. Assume it's interesting and varied, and probably something to do with programming.

Comments and Discussions

 
GeneralRe: FYI: extension method in VB.NET Pin
Hanzie537-Sep-09 21:47
Hanzie537-Sep-09 21:47 
GeneralRe: FYI: extension method in VB.NET Pin
Shimmy Weitzhandler8-Sep-09 11:23
Shimmy Weitzhandler8-Sep-09 11:23 
Questionmixing different enumtypes ? Pin
Frank Jurisch29-Jul-09 0:50
professionalFrank Jurisch29-Jul-09 0:50 
AnswerRe: mixing different enumtypes ? Pin
Frank Jurisch29-Jul-09 2:25
professionalFrank Jurisch29-Jul-09 2:25 
GeneralProblem with VB Port [modified] Pin
Dominick Marciano24-Jul-09 5:01
professionalDominick Marciano24-Jul-09 5:01 
GeneralCool Pin
Steve Wellens18-Jul-09 17:11
Steve Wellens18-Jul-09 17:11 
GeneralAn idea for further enhancements Pin
Sebastian Br.14-Jul-09 2:18
Sebastian Br.14-Jul-09 2:18 
GeneralRe: An idea for further enhancements Pin
snmskc20-Jul-09 18:54
snmskc20-Jul-09 18:54 
I think you could use standard generics to solve your problem with something like:
public static class EnumHelper
{
    public static int Length<T>()
    {
        if (!typeof(T).IsEnum)
            throw new ArgumentException("Type T must be an enumeration", "T");
        return System.Enum.GetNames(typeof(T)).Length;
    }
}

You can then call this method with any enumerated type, as in:
    public enum Gender
    {
        Male,
        Female
    }
.
.
.
    int length = EnumHelper.Length<Gender>();

Notice that I needed to add a check to make sure the generic type was an enum, since .net doesn't allow this type of constraint.
GeneralRe: An idea for further enhancements Pin
Sebastian Br.22-Jul-09 1:56
Sebastian Br.22-Jul-09 1:56 
GeneralUnderlying type problem Pin
leeloo9998-Jul-09 22:44
leeloo9998-Jul-09 22:44 
GeneralRe: Underlying type problem Pin
webdev_hb9-Jul-09 2:06
webdev_hb9-Jul-09 2:06 
QuestionPun? Pin
Colin Eberhardt8-Jul-09 5:52
Colin Eberhardt8-Jul-09 5:52 
AnswerRe: Pun? Pin
rer1458-Jul-09 8:08
rer1458-Jul-09 8:08 
GeneralRe: Pun? Pin
harsimranb18-Nov-15 8:15
harsimranb18-Nov-15 8:15 
GeneralThanks Pin
mark_w_8-Jul-09 4:59
mark_w_8-Jul-09 4:59 
GeneralDidn't know! Pin
JoseMenendez7-Jul-09 8:52
JoseMenendez7-Jul-09 8:52 

General General    News News    Suggestion Suggestion    Question Question    Bug Bug    Answer Answer    Joke Joke    Praise Praise    Rant Rant    Admin Admin   

Use Ctrl+Left/Right to switch messages, Ctrl+Up/Down to switch threads, Ctrl+Shift+Left/Right to switch pages.