evaluating cost/benefits of using extension methods in C# => 3.0
- by BillW
Hi,
In what circumstances (usage scenarios) would you choose to write an extension rather than sub-classing an object ?
< full disclosure : I am not an MS employee; I do not know Mitsu Furota personally; I do know the author of the open-source Componax library mentioned here, but I have no business dealings with him whatsoever; I am not creating, or planning to create any commercial product using extensions : in sum : this post is from pure intellectal curiousity related to my trying to (continually) become aware of "best practices"
I find the idea of extension methods "cool," and obviously you can do "far-out" things with them as in the many examples you can in Mitsu Furota's (MS) blog postslink text.
A personal friend wrote the open-source Componax librarylink text, and there's some remarkable facilities in there; but he is in complete command of his small company with total control over code guidelines, and every line of code "passes through his hands."
While this is speculation on my part : I think/guess other issues might come into play in a medium-to-large software team situation re use of Extensions.
Looking at MS's guidelines at link text, you find :
In general, you will probably be
calling extension methods far more
often than implementing your own. ...
In general, we recommend that you
implement extension methods sparingly
and only when you have to. Whenever
possible, client code that must extend
an existing type should do so by
creating a new type derived from the
existing type. For more information,
see Inheritance (C# Programming
Guide). ... When the compiler
encounters a method invocation, it
first looks for a match in the type's
instance methods. If no match is
found, it will search for any
extension methods that are defined for
the type, and bind to the first
extension method that it finds.
And at Ms's link text :
Extension methods present no specific
security vulnerabilities. They can
never be used to impersonate existing
methods on a type, because all name
collisions are resolved in favor of
the instance or static method defined
by the type itself. Extension methods
cannot access any private data in the
extended class.
Factors that seem obvious to me would include :
I assume you would not write an extension unless you expected it be used very generally and very frequently. On the other hand : couldn't you say the same thing about sub-classing ?
Knowing we can compile them into a seperate dll, and add the compiled dll, and reference it, and then use the extensions : is "cool," but does that "balance out" the cost inherent in the compiler first having to check to see if instance methods are defined as described above. Or the cost, in case of a "name clash," of using the Static invocation methods to make sure your extension is invoked rather than the instance definition ?
How frequent use of Extensions would affect run-time performance or memory use : I have no idea.
So, I'd appreciate your thoughts, or knowing about how/when you do, or don't do, use Extensions, compared to sub-classing.
thanks, Bill