lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser
1.2.2
dotnet add package lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser --version 1.2.2
NuGet\Install-Package lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser -Version 1.2.2
<PackageReference Include="lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser" Version="1.2.2"> <PrivateAssets>all</PrivateAssets> <IncludeAssets>runtime; build; native; contentfiles; analyzers</IncludeAssets> </PackageReference>
paket add lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser --version 1.2.2
#r "nuget: lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser, 1.2.2"
// Install lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser as a Cake Addin #addin nuget:?package=lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser&version=1.2.2 // Install lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser as a Cake Tool #tool nuget:?package=lookbusy1344.RecordValueAnalyser&version=1.2.2
Value-Semantics Analyser for C# Records
TL;DR
Equality checks on .NET records don’t always work properly. This analyser reports when. For example:
record TestRecord(int A, string B, IReadOnlyList<int> C);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ JSV01: member lacks value semantics
Repository
This project is a C# Roslyn code analyser to check records for correct value semantics. Source code is available here:
https://github.com/lookbusy1344/RecordValueAnalyser
Why?
This project is a C# Roslyn code analyser to check records for correct value semantics.
Records are a feature in modern C#. They are intended to be used for immutable data with value semantics. This means that two instances of the same record type should be considered equal if all their members are equal. This is the same as the behaviour of struct
and tuple types.
Internally records are regular classes (or structs), but they have a synthesized Equals
method that compares all their members. Without this Equals method, different instances would never be equal:
class TestClass
{
public int A { get; set; }
public string B { get; set; }
}
var a = new TestClass { A = 1, B = "Hello" };
var b = new TestClass { A = 1, B = "Hello" };
In this case a
never equals b
, because they are different instances. But with records:
record TestRecord(int A, string B);
var a = new TestRecord(1, "Hello");
var b = new TestRecord(1, "Hello");
Now a
and b
do equal, because the compiler has synthesized an Equals
method that compares the members. This is more natural behaviour.
But...
There is a gotcha. If one of your record members lacks value-semantics itself, the synthesized Equals
method will not work correctly. For example:
record TestRecord(int A, string B, IReadOnlyList<int> C);
var a = new TestRecord(1, "Hello", new[] { 1, 2, 3 });
var b = new TestRecord(1, "Hello", new[] { 1, 2, 3 });
The C member is an array, and these lack value semantics. Therefore a
and b
do not equal any more!
What the analyser does
It scans your records, and reports any members that don't have value semantics. It also scans into any nested stucts and tuples. In the above example, it would cause a warning on the C field:
record TestRecord(int A, string B, IReadOnlyList<int> C);
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ JSV01: member lacks value semantics
It was built for C# 12 and .NET 8. It checks record class
and record struct
types for the following:
- if the record has a Equals(T) method, it is ok and no more checks are performed
- Otherwise all members are checked for:
- the member is a primitive type, enum or string (these are ok)
- it is a object or dynamic (these are never ok)
- it is an inline array (these are never ok) - new in version 1.2 for .NET 8
- it has Equals(T) or Equals(object) method overriden directly in the type (these are ok)
- it is a record (these will be checked elsewhere, so are assumed ok here)
- it is a class (without Equals method, these are not ok)
- it is a tuple or struct (without Equals method, their members are checked recursively)
It works in Visual Studio 2022 and Visual Studio Code, and also on the command line.
Warnings
- JSV01 - a record member lacks value semantics eg
record Test(IList<int> Fail)
Code fix
The analyser provides a simple code fix. It will add template Equals
and GetHashCode
methods to the member. For example:
public record class Test(IReadOnlyList<int> Numbers)
{
public virtual bool Equals(Test? other) => false; // TODO
public override int GetHashCode() => 0; // TODO
}
..or for record structs..
public record struct Test(IReadOnlyList<int> Numbers)
{
public readonly bool Equals(Test other) => false; // TODO
public override readonly int GetHashCode() => 0; // TODO
}
It is not necessary for records to implement IEquatable<T>
. When you write your implementations SequenceEqual
is very useful for comparing collections.
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
This package has no dependencies.
NuGet packages
This package is not used by any NuGet packages.
GitHub repositories
This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.
Version | Downloads | Last updated | |
---|---|---|---|
1.2.2 | 751 | 6/21/2024 | |
1.2.1 | 472 | 1/4/2024 | |
1.2.0 | 285 | 11/28/2023 | |
1.1.0 | 238 | 10/31/2023 | |
1.0.100 | 265 | 10/26/2023 | |
1.0.0 | 269 | 10/16/2023 | |
0.9.8 | 221 | 10/8/2023 | |
0.9.7 | 209 | 10/7/2023 | |
0.9.6 | 147 | 10/5/2023 | |
0.9.5 | 149 | 10/5/2023 | |
0.9.3 | 233 | 10/4/2023 | |
0.9.2 | 236 | 10/4/2023 | |
0.9.1 | 205 | 10/4/2023 | |
0.9.0 | 128 | 10/4/2023 |