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C# Programming Cookbook

You're reading from   C# Programming Cookbook Quick fixes to your common C# programming problems, with a focus on C# 6.0

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786467300
Length 476 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Dirk Strauss Dirk Strauss
Author Profile Icon Dirk Strauss
Dirk Strauss
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. New Features in C# 6.0 FREE CHAPTER 2. Classes and Generics 3. Object-Oriented Programming in C# 4. Composing Event-Based Programs Using Reactive Extensions 5. Create Microservices on Azure Service Fabric 6. Making Apps Responsive with Asynchronous Programming 7. High Performance Programming Using Parallel and Multithreading in C# 8. Code Contracts 9. Regular Expressions 10. Choosing and Using a Source Control Strategy 11. Creating a Mobile Application in Visual Studio 12. Writing Secure Code and Debugging in Visual Studio 13. Creating a Web Application in Azure Index

Creating code contract Assert and Assume methods


The code contract Assert and Assume methods might seem confusing at first, but both provide a specific function. Where the previous code contract conditions had to appear at the beginning of the methods they were defined in, the Assert method can be placed somewhere inside a method. This means that it will have an effect on the code at that specific time in the compilation. If you, for example, perform a calculation somewhere in your method under contract and you need to check the value calculated, you can use Assert to perform a check in place to ascertain whether the calculated value passes the contract.

Note

Don't confuse Debug.Assert with Contract.Assert. They aren't the same thing. Debug.Assert will only have an effect if your code is run in the Debug mode. Contract.Assert will run in the Debug and Release modes.

With Contract.Assume, however, we are telling the code contract that it needs to assume that the condition it needs to check is...

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