Skip to content
/ Cogs Public

General utilities to help with stuff in .NET Development, from Epiforge

License

Notifications You must be signed in to change notification settings

Epiforge/Cogs

Folders and files

NameName
Last commit message
Last commit date

Latest commit

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Repository files navigation

Cogs Logo

Cogs

General utilities to help with stuff in .NET Development, from Epiforge.

Supports netstandard2.1.

Azure Pipelines Build Tests

Libraries

Active Expressions

Cogs.ActiveExpressions Nuget

This library accepts a LambdaExpression and arguments to pass to it, dissects the LambdaExpression's body, and hooks into change notification events for properties (INotifyPropertyChanged), collections (INotifyCollectionChanged), and dictionaries (Cogs.Collections.INotifyDictionaryChanged).

// Employee implements INotifyPropertyChanged
var elizabeth = Employee.GetByName("Elizabeth");
var expr = ActiveExpression.Create(e => e.Name.Length, elizabeth);
// expr subscribed to elizabeth's PropertyChanged

Then, as changes involving any elements of the expression occur, a chain of automatic re-evaluation will get kicked off, possibly causing the active expression's Value property to change.

var elizabeth = Employee.GetByName("Elizabeth");
var expr = ActiveExpression.Create(e => e.Name.Length, elizabeth);
// expr.Value == 9
elizabeth.Name = "Lizzy";
// expr.Value == 5

Also, since exceptions may be encountered after an active expression was created due to subsequent element changes, active expressions also have a Fault property, which will be set to the exception that was encountered during evaluation.

var elizabeth = Employee.GetByName("Elizabeth");
var expr = ActiveExpression.Create(e => e.Name.Length, elizabeth);
// expr.Fault is null
elizabeth.Name = null;
// expr.Fault is NullReferenceException

Active expressions raise property change events of their own, so listen for those (kinda the whole point)!

var elizabeth = Employee.GetByName("Elizabeth");
var expr = ActiveExpression.Create(e => e.Name.Length, elizabeth);
expr.PropertyChanged += (sender, e) =>
{
    if (e.PropertyName == "Fault")
    {
        // Whoops
    }
    else if (e.PropertyName == "Value")
    {
        // Do something
    }
};

When you dispose of your active expression, it will disconnect from all the events.

var elizabeth = Employee.GetByName("Elizabeth");
using (var expr = ActiveExpression.Create(e => e.Name.Length, elizabeth))
{
    // expr subscribed to elizabeth's PropertyChanged
}
// expr unsubcribed from elizabeth's PropertyChanged

Active expressions will also try to automatically dispose of disposable objects they create in the course of their evaluation when and where it makes sense. Use the ActiveExpressionOptions class for more direct control over this behavior.

You can use the static property Optimizer to specify an optimization method to invoke automatically during the active expression creation process. We recommend Tuomas Hietanen's Linq.Expression.Optimizer, the utilization of which would like like so:

ActiveExpression.Optimizer = ExpressionOptimizer.tryVisit;

var a = Expression.Parameter(typeof(bool));
var b = Expression.Parameter(typeof(bool));

var lambda = Expression.Lambda<Func<bool, bool, bool>>
(
    Expression.AndAlso
    (
        Expression.Not(a),
        Expression.Not(b)
    ),
    a,
    b
); // lambda explicitly defined as (a, b) => !a && !b

var expr = ActiveExpression.Create<bool>(lambda, false, false);
// optimizer has intervened and defined expr as (a, b) => !(a || b)
// (because Augustus De Morgan said they're essentially the same thing, but this involves less steps)

Active Query

Cogs.ActiveQuery Nuget

This library provides re-implementations of extension methods you know and love from System.Linq.Enumerable, but instead of returning Enumerable<T>s and simple values, these return ActiveEnumerable<T>s, ActiveDictionary<TKey, TValue>s, and ActiveValue<T>s. This is because, unlike traditional LINQ extension methods, these extension methods continuously update their results until those results are disposed.

But... what could cause those updates?

  • the source is enumerable, implements INotifyCollectionChanged, and raises a CollectionChanged event
  • the source is a dictionary, implements Cogs.Collections.INotifyDictionaryChanged<TKey, TValue>, and raises a DictionaryChanged event
  • the elements in the enumerable (or the values in the dictionary) implement INotifyPropertyChanged and raise a PropertyChanged event
  • a reference enclosed by a selector or a predicate passed to the extension method implements INotifyCollectionChanged, Cogs.Collections.INotifyDictionaryChanged<TKey, TValue>, or INotifyPropertyChanged and raises one of their events

That last one might be a little surprising, but this is because all selectors and predicates passed to Active Query extension methods become active expressions (see above). This means that you will not be able to pass one that the Active Expressions library doesn't support (e.g. a lambda expression that can't be converted to an expression tree or that contains nodes that Active Expressions doesn't deal with). But, in exchange for this, you get all kinds of notification plumbing that's just handled for you behind the scenes.

Suppose, for example, you're working on an app that displays a list of notes and you want the notes to be shown in descending order of when they were last edited.

var notes = new ObservableCollection<Note>();

var orderedNotes = notes.ActiveOrderBy(note => note.LastEdited, isDescending: true);
notesViewControl.ItemsSource = orderedNotes;

From then on, as you add Notes to the notes observable collection, the ActiveEnumerable<Note> named orderedNotes will be kept ordered so that notesViewControl displays them in the preferred order.

Since the ActiveEnumerable<T> is automatically subscribing to events for you, you do need to call Dispose on it when you don't need it any more.

void Page_Unload(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    orderedNotes.Dispose();
}

But, you may ask, what happens if things are a little bit more complicated because of background work? Suppose...

SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note> notes;
ActiveEnumerable<Note> orderedNotes;
Task.Run(() =>
{
    notes = new SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note>();
    orderedNotes = notes.ActiveOrderBy(note => note.LastEdited, isDescending: true);
});

Since we called the Cogs.Collections.Synchronized.SynchronizedObservableCollection constructor in the context of a TPL Task and without specifying a SynchronizationContext, operations performed on it will not be in the context of our UI thread. Manipulating this collection on a background thread might be desirable, but there will be a big problem if we bind a UI control to it, since non-UI threads shouldn't be messing with UI controls. For this specific reason, Active Query offers a special extension method that will perform the final operations on an enumerable (or dictionary) using a specific SynchronizationContext.

var uiContext = SynchronizationContext.Current;
SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note> notes;
ActiveEnumerable<Note> orderedNotes;
ActiveEnumerable<Note> notesForBinding;
Task.Run(() =>
{
    notes = new SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note>();
    orderedNotes = notes.ActiveOrderBy(note => note.LastEdited, isDescending: true);
    notesForBinding = orderedNotes.SwitchContext(uiContext);
});

Or, if you call SwitchContext without any arguments but when you know you're already running in the UI's context, it will assume you want to switch to that.

SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note> notes;
ActiveEnumerable<Note> orderedNotes;
await Task.Run(() =>
{
    notes = new SynchronizedObservableCollection<Note>();
    orderedNotes = notes.ActiveOrderBy(note => note.LastEdited, isDescending: true);
});
var notesForBinding = orderedNotes.SwitchContext();

But, keep in mind that no Active Query extension methods mutate the objects for which they are called, which means now you have two things to dispose, and in the right order!

void Page_Unload(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
    notesForBinding.Dispose();
    orderedNotes.Dispose();
}

Ahh, but what about exceptions? Well, active expressions expose a Fault property and raise PropertyChanging and PropertyChanged events for it, but... you don't really see those active expressions as an Active Query caller, do ya? For that reason, Active Query introduces the INotifyElementFaultChanges interface, which is implemented by ActiveEnumerable<T>, ActiveDictionary<TKey, TValue>, and ActiveValue<T>. You may subscribe to its ElementFaultChanging and ElementFaultChanged events to be notified when an active expression runs into a problem. You may also call the GetElementFaults method at any time to retrieve a list of the elements (or key/value pairs) that have active expressions that are currently faulted and what the exception was in each case.

As with the Active Expressions library, you can use the static property Optimizer to specify an optimization method to invoke automatically during the active expression creation process. However, please note that Active Query also has its own version of this property on the ActiveQueryOptions static class. If you are not using Active Expressions directly, we recommend using Active Query's property instead because the optimizer will be called only once per extension method call in that case, no matter how many elements or key/value pairs are processed by it. Optimize your optimization, yo.

Collections

Cogs.Collections Nuget

This library provides a number of utilities surrounding collections:

  • EquatableList<T> is an immutable list of items which may be compared with other instances of the same type and produces a hash code based on the permutation of its contents.
  • NullableKeyDictionary<TKey, TValue> and NullableKeySortedDictionary<TKey, TValue> are very slim implementations of IDictionary<TKey, TValue> that allow a single null key (useful for some edge cases in which a null key is simply going to happen and you need to be able to deal with it; otherwise, use other dictionary classes)
  • ObservableDictionary<TKey, TValue> and ObservableSortedDictionary<TKey, TValue> are counterparts to the BCL's Dictionary<TKey, TValue> and SortedDictionary<TKey, TValue>, respectively, that implement the also included IRangeDictionary<TKey, TValue> and INotifyDictionaryChanged<TKey, TValue>. Ever want to add multiple items to a dictionary at once... or keep an eye on what's being done to it? Now you can.
  • OrderedHashSet<T> is a counterpart to the BCL's HashSet<T> that maintains the order of the elements in the set. All operations are still O(1), just like the original, but if you enumerate over it you will get elements in the exact order they were added. There are also methods for manipulating the order.

Components

Cogs.Components Nuget

This library offers the PropertyChangeNotifier class, which you may inherit from to quickly get all the property utilities we're all tired of copying and pasting everywhere. Just call the protected OnPropertyChanged and OnPropertyChanging methods at the appropriate times from setters and compiler services will figure out what property you're in. Or, if all you need to do is set the value of a field, SetBackedProperty couldn't make it any easier or convenient to handle that as efficiently as possible. DynamicPropertyChangeNotifier is also available if your class needs to be dynamic.

Disposal

Cogs.Disposal Nuget

Much like the Components library, this library features base classes that handle things we've written a thousand times over, this time involving disposal. If you want to go with an implementation of the tried and true IDisposable, just inherit from SyncDisposable. Want a taste of the new IAsyncDisposable? Then, inherit from AsyncDisposable. Or, if you want to support both, there's Disposable. Additionally, if your object needs to be dynamic, you can use DynamicSyncDisposable, DynamicAsyncDisposable, or DynamicDisposable. Each of these features abstract methods to actually do your disposal. But all of the base classes feature:

  • proper implementation of the finalizer and use of GC.SuppressFinalize
  • monitored access to disposal to ensure it can't happen twice
  • the ability to override or "cancel" disposal by returning false from the abstract methods (e.g. you're reference counting and only want to dispose when your counter reaches zero)
  • a protected ThrowIfDisposed method you can call to before doing anything that requires you haven't been disposed
  • an IsDisposed property the value (and change notifications) of which are handled for you

This library provides the IDisposalStatus interface, which defines the IsDisposed property and all the base classes implement it. This library also provides the INotifyDisposing, INotifyDisposed, and INotifyDisposalOverridden interfaces, which add events that notify of these occurrences.

Lastly, this library provides DisposableValuesCache and AsyncDisposableValuesCache, which each represents a cache of key-value pairs which, once disposed by all retrievers, are removed.

Exceptions

Cogs.Exceptions Nuget

This library provides extension methods for dealing with exceptions:

  • GetFullDetails - creates a representation of an exception and all of its inner exceptions, including exception types, messages, and stack traces, and traversing multiple inner exceptions in the case of AggregateException

Expressions

Cogs.Expressions Nuget

This library has useful tools for dealing with expressions:

  • SubstituteMethods - recursively scans an expression tree to replace invocations of specific methods with replacement methods

Reflection

Cogs.Reflection Nuget

This library has useful tools for when you can't be certain of some things at compile time, such as types, methods, etc. While .NET reflection is immensely powerful, it's not very quick. To address this, this library offers the following classes:

  • FastComparer - provides a method for comparing instances of a type that is not known at compile time
  • FastConstructorInfo - provides a method for invoking a constructor that is not known at compile time
  • FastDefault - provides a method for getting the default value of a type that is not known at compile time
  • FastEqualityComparer - provides methods for testing equality of and getting hash codes for instances of a type that is not known at compile time
  • FastMethodInfo - provides a method for invoking a method that is not known at compile time

All of the above classes use reflection to initialize utilities for types at runtime, however they create delegates to perform at much better speeds and cache instances of themselves to avoid having to perform the same reflection twice. And yes, the caching is thread-safe.

Also includes extension methods for Type which search for implementations of events, methods, and properties. Also includes GenericOperations which provides methods for adding, dividing, multiplying, and/or subtracting objects.

Synchronized Collections

Cogs.Collections.Synchronized Nuget

Good idea: binding UI elements to observable collections. Bad idea: manipulating observable collections bound to UI elements from background threads. Why? Because the collection change notification event handlers will be executed on non-UI threads, which cannot safely manipulate the UI. So, I guess we need to carefully marshal calls over to the UI thread whenever we manipulate or even read those observable collections, right?

Not anymore.

Introducing the SynchronizedObservableCollection<T>, SynchronizedObservableDictionary<TKey, TValue>, and SynchronizedObservableSortedDictionary<TKey, TValue> classes. Create them on UI threads. Or, pass the UI thread's synchronization context to their constructors. Then, any time they are touched, the call is marshalled to the context of the appropriate thread. They even include async alternatives to every method and indexer just in case you would like to be well-behaved and not block worker threads just because the UI thread is busy.

I mean, no judgment. We just don't like sending threads to thread jail.

Last, but not least, each of them also has an array of range methods to handle performing multiple operations at once when you know you'll need to in advanced and would like to avoid O(2n) context switching.

Threading

Cogs.Threading Nuget

This is where we keep all our utilities for multi-threaded stuff.

  • AsyncExtensions - provides extensions for dealing with async utilities like TaskCompletionSource<TResult>
  • AsyncSynchronizationContext - provides a synchronization context for the Task Parallel Library
  • ISynchronized - represents an object the operations of which occur on a specific synchronization context (used extensively by the Synchronized Collections library, above)
  • SynchronizedExtensions - provides extensions for executing operations with instances of System.Threading.SynchronizationContext and ISynchronized

Windows

Cogs.Windows Nuget

This library includes utilities for interoperation with Microsoft Windows, including:

  • Activation - provides information relating to Windows Activation
  • ConsoleAssist - provides methods for interacting with consoles
  • Cursor - wraps Win32 API methods dealing with the cursor
  • Shell - wraps methods of the WScript.Shell COM object (specifically useful for invoking its CreateShortcut function)
  • Theme - represents the current Windows theme

Also provides extension methods for dealing with processes, including:

  • CloseMainWindowAsync - close the main window of the specified process
  • GetParentProcess - gets the parent process of the specified process

Wpf

Cogs.Wpf Nuget

This library includes utilities for Windows Presentation Foundation, including:

  • ActionCommand - a command that can be manipulated by its caller
  • ControlAssist - provides attached dependency properties to enhance the functionality of controls (e.g. AdditionalInputBindings)
  • Screen - represents a display device or multiple display devices on a single system
  • WindowAssist - provides attached dependency properties to enhance the functionality of windows (e.g. AutoActivation, BlurBehind, IsBlurredBehind, IsCaption, SendSystemCommand, SetDefaultWindowStyleOnSystemCommands, ShowSystemMenu)

Also includes extension methods for visuals:

  • GetVisualAncestor - gets the first ancestor of a reference in the Visual Tree, or null if none could be found
  • GetVisualDescendent - gets the first member of a Visual Tree descending from a reference, or null if none could be found

Also includes extension methods for windows:

  • IsInSafePosition - gets whether the specified window is completely contained within the closest working area
  • SafeguardPosition - moves the specified window the minimum amount to be completely contained within the closest working area

Also includes behaviors:

  • ComboBoxDataVirtualization & ListBoxDataVirtualization - sets the items source of a combo box or list box (including list views), respectively, to a collection that loads elements as they are needed for display and keeps selected elements loaded (requires .NET Core 3.1 or later)
  • DelayedFocus - focuses an element after a specified delay
  • DeselectAllOnEmptySpaceClicked - feselects all items when empty space in a list view is clicked
  • OpenNavigateUri - opens the Hyperlink's NavigateUri when it is clicked
  • PasswordBindingTarget - allows binding to PasswordBox.Password

Also includes controls:

  • UrlAwareTextBlock - provides a lightweight control for displaying small amounts of flow content which finds URLs and makes them clickable hyperlinks

Also includes input gestures:

  • MouseWheelDownGesture - defines a mouse wheel down gesture that can be used to invoke a command
  • MouseWheelUpGesture - defines a mouse wheel up gesture that can be used to invoke a command

Also includes validation rules:

  • InvalidCharactersValidationRule - provides a way to create a rule in order to check that user input does not contain any invalid characters
  • StringNotEmptyValidationRule - provides a way to create a rule in order to check that user input is not an empty string
  • ValidFileNameValidationRule - provides a way to create a rule in order to check that user input does not contain any invalid file name characters
  • ValidPathValidationRule - provides a way to create a rule in order to check that user input does not contain any invalid file system path characters

Also includes a wide array of value converters. Please see a package explorer for details.

License

Apache 2.0 License

Contributing

Click here to learn how to contribute.

Acknowledgements

Makes use of the glorious AsyncEx library by Stephen Cleary and the Poly# NuGet package by Sergio Pedri because it's just great.