5

I just want to verify my understanding about the following

  • Delegate - a method signature
  • Lambdas - anonymous function
  • Anonymous Function - just that
  • Action - An anonymous function that returns nothing
  • Func - An anonymous function that returns something

hmm... they all do similar things, how do you define & know when to use each?

sorry, I don't explain well

1
  • 1
    This is so broad that any attempt to answer this will just spawn an array of more questions. Read up the basics, and rather ask a question when you actually face a problem or have a question regarding a specific use of this. Nov 25, 2010 at 9:06

3 Answers 3

9
  • Delegate - it is not a method signature. It is a type which encapsulates a method. Hence a delegate declaration should have a signature similar to the method it wants to encapsulate. When to use Delegate - whenever you want to pass a method to another function. For more see this and this.

  • Lambdas - short hand and more expressive way of writing an anonymous function. But there is more to it. A lambda expression can also be converted to an expression tree. For more see this.

  • Anonymous Function - yes .. just that

  • Action - It is a delegate which can encapsulate a function that returns nothing. So you should think of it as a type that can encapsulate an action and use it when you need to pass an action around.

  • Func - A delegate that can encapsulate a function that returns something. But you should look at it as a type that can encapsulate a transformation and use when you want to pass around a transformation.

2
  • I am wondering then, why can't I pass a delegate instead of a Action or Func.
    – Jiew Meng
    Nov 25, 2010 at 9:29
  • Action and Func are delegates which are provided by .Net. So you when you create an instance of Action like Action myAction = myMethod; and pass it you are actually passing a delegate around. Nov 25, 2010 at 9:34
4

Action and Func are just special cases of the Delegate. Delegate itself is something that references a method and can be used to call it.

3

Don't try to see C# + these features. Also because there is not a strict pragmatic answer to your question.

Start from a functional programming point of view, for example try to learn F# to get inside what and when lambdas are used (actually everywhere inside a functional language) and then you'll understand things better.

It will open your mind and make you think differently about imperative programming or mixed languages like C#.

1
  • 1
    I looked at some F# videos, very interesting esp. the one by Luca Bolognese @PDC08. But I don't really get much, then I stopped watching those, maybe I should start looking @ them again
    – Jiew Meng
    Nov 25, 2010 at 9:28

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.