// automatically generated, do not modify
namespace MyGame.Example
{
using System;
using FlatBuffers;
public sealed class Test : Struct {
public Test __init(int _i, ByteBuffer _bb) { bb_pos = _i; bb = _bb; return this; }
public short A { get { return bb.GetShort(bb_pos + 0); } }
public void MutateA(short a) { bb.PutShort(bb_pos + 0, a); }
public sbyte B { get { return bb.GetSbyte(bb_pos + 2); } }
public void MutateB(sbyte b) { bb.PutSbyte(bb_pos + 2, b); }
public static Offset<Test> CreateTest(FlatBufferBuilder builder, short A, sbyte B) {
builder.Prep(2, 4);
builder.Pad(1);
builder.PutSbyte(B);
builder.PutShort(A);
return new Offset<Test>(builder.Offset);
}
};
}
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Michael Collins authored
I updated idl_gen_general.cpp to add support for generating a Get Bytes method for a vector to the generated C# source code. Given a byte vector field named Foo, a method named GetFooBytes() will be generated in the C# source code that will return an ArraySegment<byte> value referencing the vector data in the underlying ByteBuffer. I added a method to Table.cs named __vector_as_arraysegment that is used by the code generated by the change to the C# generator. __vector_as_arraysegment will take the offset of the vector and will return the ArraySegment<byte> value corresponding to the bytes that store the vector data. I updated FlatBuffersExampleTests.cs to add tests to validate my implementation of Table.__vector_as_arraysegment. I added tests to demonstrate that the bytes for the monster's name can be extracted from the underlying byte array. I also added tests to show that Table.__vector_as_arraysegment returns a null value if the vector is not present in the FlatBuffer. I used the updated flatc.exe program to regenerate the C# source files for the MyGame example. The new Monster class includes the GetXXXBytes methods to return the byte arrays containing data for vectors.
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