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Is there a way to Invoke an overloaded method using reflection in .NET (2.0). I have an application that dynamically instantiates classes that have been derived from a common base class. For compatibility purposes, this base class contains 2 methods of the same name, one with parameters, and one without. I need to call the parameterless method via the Invoke method. Right now, all I get is an error telling me that I'm trying to call an ambiguous method.

Yes, I could just cast the object as an instance of my base class and call the method I need. Eventually that will happen, but right now, internal complications will not allow it.

Any help would be great! Thanks.

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3 Answers

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You have to specify which method you want:

class SomeType 
{
    void Foo(int size, string bar) { }
    void Foo() { }
}

SomeType obj = new SomeType();
// call with int and string arguments
obj.GetType().GetMethod("Foo", new Type[] { typeof(int), typeof(string)).Invoke(obj, new object[] { 42, "Hello" });
// call without arguments
obj.GetType().GetMethod("Foo", new Type[0]).Invoke(obj, new object[0]);
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Use the GetMethod overload that takes a System.Type[], and pass an empty Type[];

typeof ( Class ).GetMethod ( "Method", new Type [ 0 ] { } ).Invoke ( instance, null );
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Yes. When you invoke the method pass the parameters that match the overload that you want.

For instance:

Type tp = myInstance.GetType();

//call parameter-free overload
tp.InvokeMember( "methodName", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, 
   Type.DefaultBinder, myInstance, new object[0] );

//call parameter-ed overload
tp.InvokeMember( "methodName", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, 
   Type.DefaultBinder, myInstance, new { param1, param2 } );

If you do this the other way round(i.e. by finding the MemberInfo and calling Invoke) be careful that you get the right one - the parameter-free overload could be the first found.

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Interestingly enough, this didn't work. I passed no parameters to my parameterless method, and I still got an ambiguous call. – Wes P Oct 21 '08 at 21:08
How does this work with parameters of different types? Say I have two overloads where one takes a string and the other takes an int? – smaclell Oct 21 '08 at 21:10
Not a problem - the underlying types of the parameters are what is checked. – Keith Oct 21 '08 at 21:11
The thing to be careful of is when you have types that implicitly cast to one another - then .Net picks instance methods over inherited methods. – Keith Oct 21 '08 at 21:12
See this question for an example of that: stackoverflow.com/questions/154112 – Keith Oct 21 '08 at 21:13
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