Friday, 27 April 2007

Being more Fluent with Equals

A lot of .NET developers don't realise that there is a difference between the == operator and the Equals method. Even fewer developers realise there is a difference between the == operator and the == operator. Confused? That's because == will behave differently depending on whether you apply it to a reference type or a value type. More confusingly some .NET classes override == and will behave differently again. To explain MS made this attempt:
For predefined value types, the equality operator (==) returns true if the values of its operands are equal, false otherwise. For reference types other than string, == returns true if its two operands refer to the same object. For the string type, == compares the values of the strings.
Except that's not entirey true. The == operator on string only works if they are both strings. Confused even more? Then read this post from the C# FAQ.

So are you clear now? If not then MS sums it up quite nicely in their Guildelines for overloading:
To check for reference equality, use ReferenceEquals. To check for value equality, use Equals or Equals.
So why don't developers have it drummed into them to follow the above advice and just dump ==? Because they believe that == is easier to read. Let's think about it for a moment. How is it easier to read? Using == risks making buggy code and goes against every rule about intention revealing interfaces and maintaining encapsulation. How the hell do you know what the developer intended when she did x == y? Were they checking for value equality or reference equality? Or had they overloaded == to always do value equality (as string does)? Basically you don't know (breaking intent) and you'd have to open up the class to see (breaking encapsulation) and still you won't know for sure. Then of course there is just plain = now did they mean to do that or did they just miss the second =? So == is definitely not easier to read from an intent or encapsulation point of view.

So they must mean that == is better style. This I believe is flawed because sometimes you end up doing a bit of == here and a bit of Equals there and what's more all objects have Equals but structs do not have ==. So having a style which prefers == except when == doesn't do the same thing as Equals (or == doesn't even exist) throws all consistency and style out of the window and you end up with a style guide that says "use == except when or when or when" rather than just placing a total ban on ==.

Then it must just be that == looks better. I think this is just habit. Lets take the following lines:
if(x == y)
{
// do something
}
if(x = y)
{
// do something
}
if(x.Equals(y))
{
// do something
}
If you took a group of people who knew little about development (or C# for that matter) and ask them what each line means I can guarantee everyone of them will always get the last line right (they'd probably think that the double equals meant equals twice and that would confuse them on the single one). The Equals method is the most explicit and clear and readable of all of them (it actually reads as x equals y). To further prove my point grab your same person and ask them what this means:
if(x)
{
// do something
}
if(!x)
{
// do something
}
Then ask them what this means:
if(x.Equals(true))
{
// do something
}
if(x.Equals(false))
{
// do something
}
Those second examples look far clearer and you'd be an idiot to not know what the intent was. What's more they make their own mini fluent interfaces. Also you eliminate all those "oh there's a bang at the beginning" bugs. However I think it is fair to say that x.Equals(true) is a bit overkill though I do find that x.Equals(false) is somewhat clearer than the using the logical negation operator.

So after knowing that technically it's the right thing to do, that it's better for showing intent, that it is more consistent, that is reduces risk of bugs and everything else, if you still need convincing because you still think that == looks better then justify it by saying you're using a fluent interface.

1 comment:

Gail H said...

Great bblog I enjoyed reading

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West Malling, Kent, United Kingdom
I am a ThoughtWorker and general Memeologist living in the UK. I have worked in IT since 2000 on many projects from public facing websites in media and e-commerce to rich-client banking applications and corporate intranets. I am passionate and committed to making IT a better world.