So I'm creating a game in XNA, C# 4.0, and I need to manage a lot of PowerUps (which in code are all inherited from class "PowerUp"), and to handle back-end management of the PowerUps I currently have an enum, PowerupEffectType, with a value for each child class of PowerUp. Eventually in the code I need to do conversions from PowerupEffectType to the Powerup type (of class Type, achieved usually with typeof([class name])).
Since this is a group project, I want to marry each value of PowerupEffectType to its corresponding class Type as well as possible, i.e.: Not just expect my other programmers to use switch statements to do the conversion manually, and making sure additions/expansions later involve as few changes in as few places as possible. I have a few options for this, and the best I've discovered so far is creating enum pseudo-methods that condense everything down to a single switch statement (99% of what I want), thanks to some tips I found here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb383974.aspx
But I'm trying to take it one step further - can I save a Type in an enum? I know you can save enums as a specific type (link: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc138362.aspx), but Type isn't one of them. The current choices are byte, sbyte, short, ushort, int, uint, long, and ulong. Is there any feasible way to save a convert a Type to any of the above data types and back?
Just to be clear, this is what I WISH I could do, and I'm looking for a way to do:
// (Assuming 'LightningPowerup', 'FirePowerup', and 'WaterPowerup' are
// all declared classes that inherit from a single base class)
public enum PowerupEffectType
{
LIGHTNING = typeof(LightningPowerup),
FIRE = typeof(FirePowerup),
WATER = typeof(WaterPowerup)
}
Is there any way to do this, or am I just overcomplicating a solution to a problem that's already 99% complete?
Thanks in advance!
You can't do it as the value of an enum, but you could specify it in an attribute:
using System;
using System.Runtime.CompilerServices;
[AttributeUsage(AttributeTargets.Field)]
public class EffectTypeAttribute : Attribute
{
public Type Type { get; private set; }
public EffectTypeAttribute(Type type)
{
this.Type = type;
}
}
public class LightningPowerup {}
public class FirePowerup {}
public class WaterPowerup {}
public enum PowerupEffectType
{
[EffectType(typeof(LightningPowerup))]
Lightning,
[EffectType(typeof(FirePowerup))]
Fire,
[EffectType(typeof(WaterPowerup))]
Water
}
You can then extract those attribute values at execution time with reflection. However, I would personally just create a dictionary:
private static Dictionary<PowerupEffectType, Type> EffectTypeMapping =
new Dictionary<PowerupEffectType, Type>
{
{ PowerupEffectType.Lightning, typeof(LightningPowerup) },
{ PowerupEffectType.Fire, typeof(FirePowerup) },
{ PowerupEffectType.Water, typeof(WaterPowerup) }
};
No need for a special attribute, no need to extract the values with fiddly reflection code.