CA1009: Declare event handlers correctly
Item | Value |
---|---|
RuleId | CA1009 |
Category | Microsoft.Design |
Breaking change | Breaking |
Cause
A delegate that handles a public or protected event does not have the correct signature, return type, or parameter names.
Note
This rule has been deprecated. For more information, see Deprecated rules.
Rule description
Event handler methods take two parameters. The first is of type System.Object and is named 'sender'. This is the object that raised the event. The second parameter is of type System.EventArgs and is named 'e'. This is the data that is associated with the event. For example, if the event is raised whenever a file is opened, the event data typically contains the name of the file.
Event handler methods should not return a value. In the C# programming language, this is indicated by the return type void
. An event handler can invoke multiple methods in multiple objects. If the methods were allowed to return a value, multiple return values would occur for each event, and only the value of the last method that was invoked would be available.
How to fix violations
To fix a violation of this rule, correct the signature, return type, or parameter names of the delegate. For details, see the following example.
When to suppress warnings
Do not suppress a warning from this rule.
Example
The following example shows a delegate that is suited to handling events. The methods that can be invoked by this event handler comply with the signature that is specified in the Design Guidelines. AlarmEventHandler
is the type name of the delegate. AlarmEventArgs
derives from the base class for event data, EventArgs, and holds alarm event data.
using System;
namespace DesignLibrary
{
public class AlarmEventArgs : EventArgs {}
public delegate void AlarmEventHandler(object sender, AlarmEventArgs e);
}
Related rules
CA2109: Review visible event handlers