I just bumped into a really strange C# behavior, and I’d be glad if someone could explain it to me.
Say, I have the following class:
class Program
{
static int len = 1;
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Func<double, double> call = len => 1;
len = 1; // error: 'len' conflicts with the declaration 'csutils.Program.len'
Program.len = 1; // ok
}
}
As I get it, in the line of commentary I have the following objects in my field of view: len
variable and call
.
Inside of lambda, I have local parameter len
and Program.len
variable.
However, after declaring such lambda, I cannot use len
variable in the scope of Main
method anymore. I have to either refer to it as to Program.len
either rewrite lambda to be anyOtherNameBesidesLen => 1
.
Why is it happening? Is this correct behavior of language, or I’ve encountered a bug in the language? If this is correct behavior, how is it justified by the language architecture? Why is it okay for lambda capture variable to mess with code outside lambda?
Edit: Alessandro D'Andria has got quite nice examples (number 1 and 2 in his comment).
edit2: This code (equal to the one I wrote at the beginning) is illegal:
class Program
{
static int len = 0;
static void Main(string[] args)
{
{
int len = 1;
}
int x = len;
}
}
This code however, despite having exactly the same scope structure, is perfectly legal:
class Other
{
static int len = 0;
class Nested
{
static void foo()
{
int len = 1;
}
static int x = len;
}
}
or i've encountered a bug in the language
I liked your self confidence.{ var len = 5; }
would create an ambiguity as well.