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.netusing-statementobjectdisposedexception

Why is my FileStream object being disposed of when I'm "using" a BinaryReader object?


Consider the following function:

    private int GetSomethingFromFile(FileStream fs) 
    {
        using (BinaryReader br = new BinaryReader(fs))
        {
            fs.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
            return br.ReadInt32();
        }
    }

A FileStream object is passed in as a parameter and a BinaryReader is declared with a using statement. When I try to use that FileStream object, after calling this function, it throws a System.ObjectDisposedException. Why is that FileStream object being disposed of along with the BinaryReader object?


Solution

  • It is a very good question, and I don't know why it was decided that this was how it should be, but alas it is documented to be this way:

    BinaryReader class

    Close: Closes the current reader and the underlying stream.

    If you check out this answer to the question How do I “fork” a Stream in .NET? then you'll see that he refers to a class called NonClosingStreamWrapper in a library called MiscUtil that @Jon Skeet has written that you can use to wrap around the stream to prevent it from being closed.

    You would use it like this (for your example):

    private int GetSomethingFromFile(FileStream fs) 
    {
        using (var wrapper = new NonClosingStreamWrapper(fs))
        using (BinaryReader br = new BinaryReader(wrapper))
        {
            fs.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
            return br.ReadInt32();
        }
    }