• mozingo@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    This sure looks like C#. I use typeof every once in a while when I want to check that the type of a reference is a specific type and not a parent or derived type. But yea, really not that often.

    • r00ty@kbin.life
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      1 year ago

      Yeah in C# it has quite a few uses.

      I’m working on a background fun project where there’s a base class that is for olde style CPU emulation. Where you can derive a class from the base class and essentially design 8bit style CPUs.

      I have a separate class as a generic Assembler that will work with any of the created CPUs. But, to be able to do that I need to be able to get information about instructions, arguments, opcodes, registers etc from the derived class.

      So the assembler is instantiated with Assembler\ and then it uses typeof to instantiate the actual CPU class being used to get all the information.

      So, that’s just an example of when you’d use something like this.

      • tonur@feddit.dk
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        1 year ago

        I have used typeof(T) inside the generic class, so fx a function inside the class Pie where T can be refered. But out of context, if you were to call typeof(T) inside Program.cs’s main function, it would not work.

      • Kogasa@programming.dev
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        1 year ago

        I don’t get what you mean. You can define class Pie and instantiate it with the type argument Pie.

        Huh, maybe I don’t get it because Lemmy is literally erasing angle brackets from our messages. Not just “not rendering.” It’s removing them entirely. There should be four angle brackets in the first line of this comment…