A delegate is a form of
type-safe function pointer
A function pointer, also called a subroutine pointer or procedure pointer, is a pointer that points to a function. As opposed to referencing a data value, a function pointer points to executable code within memory. Dereferencing the function point ...
used by the
Common Language Infrastructure (CLI). Delegates specify a
method to call and optionally an
object to call the method on. Delegates are used, among other things, to implement
callbacks
In computer programming, a callback or callback function is any reference to executable code that is passed as an argument to another piece of code; that code is expected to ''call back'' (execute) the callback function as part of its job. Thi ...
and
event listener
In programming and software design, an event is an action or occurrence recognized by software, often originating asynchronously from the external environment, that may be handled by the software. Computer events can be generated or triggered ...
s. A delegate object encapsulates a reference to a method. The delegate object can then be passed to code that can call the referenced method, without having to know at compile time which method will be invoked.
A multicast delegate is a delegate that points to several methods.
Multicast
In computer networking, multicast is group communication where data transmission is addressed to a group of destination computers simultaneously. Multicast can be one-to-many or many-to-many distribution. Multicast should not be confused wit ...
delegation is a mechanism that provides functionality to execute more than one method. There is a list of delegates maintained internally, and when the multicast delegate is invoked, the list of delegates is executed.
In C#, delegates are often used to implement callbacks in event driven programming. For example, a delegate may be used to indicate which method should be called when the user clicks on some button. Delegates allow the programmer to notify several methods that an event has occurred.
[ Wikibooks:C Sharp Programming/Delegates and Events]
C# code example
Code to declare a
delegate type, named
SendMessageDelegate, which takes a
Message as a parameter and returns
void:
delegate void SendMessageDelegate(Message message);
Code to define a method that takes an instantiated delegate as its argument:
void SendMessage(SendMessageDelegate sendMessageDelegateReference)
The implemented method that runs when the delegate is called:
void HandleSendMessage(Message message)
Code to call the SendMessage method, passing an instantiated delegate as an argument:
SendMessage(new SendMessageDelegate(HandleSendMessage));
Delegates (C#)
delegate void Notifier(string sender); // Normal method signature with the keyword delegate
Notifier greetMe; // Delegate variable
void HowAreYou(string sender)
greetMe = new Notifier(HowAreYou);
A delegate variable calls the associated method and is called as follows:
greetMe("Anton"); // Calls HowAreYou("Anton") and prints "How are you, Anton?"
Delegate variables are
first-class objects of the form and can be assigned to any matching method, or to the value . They store a method
and its receiver without any parameters:
new DelegateType(funnyObj.HowAreYou);
The object can be and omitted. If the method is , it should not be the object (also called an instance in other languages), but the class itself. It should not be , but could be , or .
To call a method with a delegate successfully, the method signature has to match the with the same number of parameters of the same kind (, , ) with the same type (including return type).
Multicast delegates (C#)
A delegate variable can hold multiple values at the same time:
void HowAreYou(string sender)
void HowAreYouToday(string sender)
Notifier greetMe;
greetMe = HowAreYou;
greetMe += HowAreYouToday;
greetMe("Leonardo"); // "How are you, Leonardo?"
// "How are you today, Leonardo?"
greetMe -= HowAreYou;
greetMe("Pereira"); // "How are you today, Pereira?"
If the multicast delegate is a function or has no parameter, the parameter of the last call is returned.
Technical implementation details
Although internal
implementations may vary, delegate
instances can be thought of as a
tuple
In mathematics, a tuple is a finite ordered list (sequence) of elements. An -tuple is a sequence (or ordered list) of elements, where is a non-negative integer. There is only one 0-tuple, referred to as ''the empty tuple''. An -tuple is defi ...
of an
object and a
method pointer
Pointer may refer to:
Places
* Pointer, Kentucky
* Pointers, New Jersey
* Pointers Airport, Wasco County, Oregon, United States
* The Pointers, a pair of rocks off Antarctica
People with the name
* Pointer (surname), a surname (including a list ...
and a
reference
Reference is a relationship between objects in which one object designates, or acts as a means by which to connect to or link to, another object. The first object in this relation is said to ''refer to'' the second object. It is called a '' name'' ...
(possibly null) to another delegate. Hence a reference to one delegate is possibly a reference to multiple delegates. When the first delegate has finished, if its chain reference is not null, the next will be invoked, and so on until the list is complete. This pattern allows an
event to have overhead scaling easily from that of a single reference up to dispatch to a list of delegates, and is widely used in the CLI.
Performance
Performance of delegates used to be much slower than a
virtual or
interface method call (6 to 8 times slower in Microsoft's 2003 benchmarks), but, since the
.NET 2.0
CLR in 2005, it is about the same as interface calls.
This means there is a small added overhead compared to direct method invocations.
There are very stringent rules on the construction of delegate classes. These rules permit optimizing compilers a great deal of leeway when optimizing delegates while ensuring type safety.
See also
*
Continuation
*
Delegation pattern
*
Delegation (programming)
In computing or computer programming, delegation refers generally to one entity passing something to another entity,Barry Wilkinson, ''Grid Computing: Techniques and Applications'' (2009), p. 164, . and narrowly to various specific forms of relat ...
*
Hooking
References
External links
MSDN documentation for DelegatesMicrosoft answer to Sun
{{DEFAULTSORT:Delegate
Common Language Infrastructure
Subroutines