Possible Duplicate:
Named arguments and generic type inference in C# 4.0
If you attempt to compile this code...
public interface IBar { }
public class StandardBar : IBar { }
public class Foo
{
public TBar GetBarCore<TBar>(Func<TBar> getter)
where TBar : IBar
{
return getter();
}
public StandardBar GetBar()
{
return GetBarCore(getter: Find);
}
public StandardBar Find()
{
return new StandardBar();
}
}
...you will get this error:
The type arguments for method
ConsoleApplication1.Foo.GetBarCore<TBar>(System.Func<TBar>)
cannot be inferred from the usage. Try specifying the type arguments explicitly.
It took me a while to figure out that the named argument (getter:
) on GetBarCore()
is the culprit. If you remove the argument name, leaving just GetBarCore(Find)
, the code compiles successfully. Less surprisingly, you can also get the code to compile successfully if, as the error message suggests, you explicitly specify the type argument (resulting in GetBarCore<StandardBar>(getter: Find)
).
(Incidentally, this little idiosyncrasy tripped up ReSharper as well. I had some code that worked fine. I made a very minor change to the code file and performed a "Cleanup Code" operation, which removes what R# thinks is "redundant" code. Well, it removed one of my seemingly unnecessary explicit type arguments on a method call with a named argument, and suddenly, my code wouldn't compile.)
Can someone explain why providing a named argument would make it impossible for the compiler to infer a type argument from usage?