I know in php you are able to make a call like:
$function_name = 'hello';
$function_name();
function hello() { echo 'hello'; }
Is this possible in .Net?
Yes. You can use reflection. Something like this:
Type thisType = this.GetType();
MethodInfo theMethod = thisType.GetMethod(TheCommandString);
theMethod.Invoke(this, userParameters);
In C#, you can create delegates as function pointers. Check out the following MSDN article for information on usage: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms173171(VS.80).aspx
public static void hello()
{
Console.Write("hello world");
}
/* code snipped */
public delegate void functionPointer();
functionPointer foo = hello;
foo(); // Writes hello world to the console.
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Type type = typeof(MyReflectionClass);
MethodInfo method = type.GetMethod("MyMethod");
MyReflectionClass c = new MyReflectionClass();
string result = (string)method.Invoke(c, null);
Console.WriteLine(result);
}
}
public class MyReflectionClass
{
public string MyMethod()
{
return DateTime.Now.ToString();
}
}
You can invoke methods of a class instance using reflection, doing a dynamic method invocation:
Suppose that you have a method called hello in a the actual instance (this):
string methodName = "hello";
//Get the method information using the method info class
MethodInfo mi = this.GetType().GetMethod(methodName);
//Invoke the method
// (null- no parameter for the method call
// or you can pass the array of parameters...)
mi.Invoke(this, null);
A slight tangent -- if you want to parse and evaluate an entire expression string which contains (nested!) functions, consider NCalc (http://ncalc.codeplex.com/ and nuget)
Ex. slightly modified from the project documentation:
// the expression to evaluate, e.g. from user input (like a calculator program, hint hint college students)
var exprStr = "10 + MyFunction(3, 6)";
Expression e = new Expression(exprString);
// tell it how to handle your custom function
e.EvaluateFunction += delegate(string name, FunctionArgs args) {
if (name == "MyFunction")
args.Result = (int)args.Parameters[0].Evaluate() + (int)args.Parameters[1].Evaluate();
};
// confirm it worked
Debug.Assert(19 == e.Evaluate());
And within the EvaluateFunction
delegate you would call your existing function.
In Fact I am working on Windows Workflow 4.5 and I got to find a way to pass a delegate from a statemachine to a method with no success. The only way I got to find was to pass a string with the name of the method I wanted to pass as delegate and to convert the string to a delegate inside the method. Very nice answer. Thanks. Check this link https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/53cz7sc6(v=vs.110).aspx