What about the using construct in c#
I see this:
using (StreamWriter sw = new StreamWriter("file.txt"))
{
// d0 w0rk s0n
}
Everything I try to find info on is does not explain what this doing, and instead gives me stuff about 开发者_运维百科namespaces.
You want to check out documentation for the using statement (instead of the using directive which is about namespaces).
Basically it means that the block is transformed into a try
/finally
block, and sw.Dispose()
gets called in the finally block (with a suitable nullity check).
You can use a using statement wherever you deal with a type implementing IDisposable
- and usually you should use it for any disposable object you take responsibility for.
A few interesting bits about the syntax:
You can acquire multiple resources in one statement:
using (Stream input = File.OpenRead("input.txt"), output = File.OpenWrite("output.txt")) { // Stuff }
You don't have to assign to a variable:
// For some suitable type returning a lock token etc using (padlock.Acquire()) { // Stuff }
You can nest them without braces; handy for avoiding indentation
using (TextReader reader = File.OpenText("input.txt")) using (TextWriter writer = File.CreateText("output.txt")) { // Stuff }
The using construct is essentially a syntactic wrapper around automatically calling dispose on the object within the using. For example your above code roughly translates into the following
StreamWriter sw = new StreamWriter("file.text");
try {
// do work
} finally {
if ( sw != null ) {
sw.Dispose();
}
}
Your question is answered by section 8.13 of the specification.
Here you go: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/yh598w02.aspx
Basically, it automatically calls the Dispose member of an IDisposable interface at the end of the using scope.
check this Using statement
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