Using Type dynamic (C# Programming Guide)

Visual C# 2010 introduces a new type, dynamic. The type is a static type, but an object of type dynamic bypasses static type checking. In most cases, it functions like it has type object. At compile time, an element that is typed as dynamic is assumed to support any operation. Therefore, you do not have to be concerned about whether the object gets its value from a COM API, from a dynamic language such as IronPython, from the HTML Document Object Model (DOM), from reflection, or from somewhere else in the program. However, if the code is not valid, errors are caught at run time.

For example, if instance method exampleMethod1 in the following code has only one parameter, the compiler recognizes that the first call to the method, ec.exampleMethod1(10, 4), is not valid because it contains two arguments. The call causes a compiler error. The second call to the method, dynamic_ec.exampleMethod1(10, 4), is not checked by the compiler because the type of dynamic_ec is dynamic. Therefore, no compiler error is reported. However, the error does not escape notice indefinitely. It is caught at run time and causes a run-time exception.

static void Main(string[] args)
{
    ExampleClass ec = new ExampleClass();
    // The following call to exampleMethod1 causes a compiler error  
    // if exampleMethod1 has only one parameter. Uncomment the line 
    // to see the error. 
    //ec.exampleMethod1(10, 4);

    dynamic dynamic_ec = new ExampleClass();
    // The following line is not identified as an error by the 
    // compiler, but it causes a run-time exception.
    dynamic_ec.exampleMethod1(10, 4);

    // The following calls also do not cause compiler errors, whether  
    // appropriate methods exist or not.
    dynamic_ec.someMethod("some argument", 7, null);
    dynamic_ec.nonexistentMethod();
}
class ExampleClass
{
    public ExampleClass() { }
    public ExampleClass(int v) { }

    public void exampleMethod1(int i) { }

    public void exampleMethod2(string str) { }
}

The role of the compiler in these examples is to package together information about what each statement is proposing to do to the object or expression that is typed as dynamic. At run time, the stored information is examined, and any statement that is not valid causes a run-time exception.

The result of most dynamic operations is itself dynamic. For example, if you rest the mouse pointer over the use of testSum in the following example, IntelliSense displays the type (local variable) dynamic testSum.

dynamic d = 1;
var testSum = d + 3;
// Rest the mouse pointer over testSum in the following statement.
System.Console.WriteLine(testSum);

Operations in which the result is not dynamic include conversions from dynamic to another type, and constructor calls that include arguments of type dynamic. For example, the type of testInstance in the following declaration is ExampleClass, not dynamic.

var testInstance = new ExampleClass(d);

Conversion examples are shown in the following section, "Conversions."

Conversions

Conversions between dynamic objects and other types are easy. This enables the developer to switch between dynamic and non-dynamic behavior.

Any object can be converted to dynamic type implicitly, as shown in the following examples.

dynamic d1 = 7;
dynamic d2 = "a string";
dynamic d3 = System.DateTime.Today;
dynamic d4 = System.Diagnostics.Process.GetProcesses();

Conversely, an implicit conversion can be dynamically applied to any expression of type dynamic.

int i = d1;
string str = d2;
DateTime dt = d3;
System.Diagnostics.Process[] procs = d4;

Overload Resolution with Arguments of Type dynamic

Overload resolution occurs at run time instead of at compile time if one or more of the arguments in a method call have the type dynamic, or if the receiver of the method call is of type dynamic. In the following example, if the only accessible exampleMethod2 method is defined to take a string argument, sending d1 as the argument does not cause a compiler error, but it does cause a run-time exception. Overload resolution fails at run time because the run-time type of d1 is int, and exampleMethod2 requires a string.

// Valid.
ec.exampleMethod2("a string");

// The following statement does not cause a compiler error, even though ec is not 
// dynamic. A run-time exception is raised because the run-time type of d1 is int.
ec.exampleMethod2(d1);
// The following statement does cause a compiler error. 
//ec.exampleMethod2(7);

Dynamic Language Runtime

The dynamic language runtime (DLR) is a new API in .NET Framework 4. It provides the infrastructure that supports the dynamic type in C#, and also the implementation of dynamic programming languages such as IronPython and IronRuby. For more information about the DLR, see Dynamic Language Runtime Overview.

COM Interop

Visual C# 2010 includes several features that improve the experience of interoperating with COM APIs such as the Office Automation APIs. Among the improvements are the use of the dynamic type, and of named and optional arguments.

Many COM methods allow for variation in argument types and return type by designating the types as object. This has necessitated explicit casting of the values to coordinate with strongly typed variables in C#. If you compile by using the /link (C# Compiler Options) option, the introduction of the dynamic type enables you to treat the occurrences of object in COM signatures as if they were of type dynamic, and thereby to avoid much of the casting. For example, the following statements contrast how you access a cell in a Microsoft Office Excel spreadsheet with the dynamic type and without the dynamic type.

// Before the introduction of dynamic.
((Excel.Range)excelApp.Cells[1, 1]).Value2 = "Name";
Excel.Range range2008 = (Excel.Range)excelApp.Cells[1, 1];
// After the introduction of dynamic, the access to the Value property and 
// the conversion to Excel.Range are handled by the run-time COM binder.
excelApp.Cells[1, 1].Value = "Name";
Excel.Range range2010 = excelApp.Cells[1, 1];

Title

Description

dynamic (C# Reference)

Describes the usage of the dynamic keyword.

Dynamic Language Runtime Overview

Provides an overview of the DLR, which is a runtime environment that adds a set of services for dynamic languages to the common language runtime (CLR).

Walkthrough: Creating and Using Dynamic Objects (C# and Visual Basic)

Provides step-by-step instructions for creating a custom dynamic object and for creating a project that accesses an IronPython library.

How to: Access Office Interop Objects by Using Visual C# 2010 Features (C# Programming Guide)

Demonstrates how to create a project that uses named and optional arguments, the dynamic type, and other enhancements that simplify access to Office API objects.