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For various reasons, I need to run code that looks like this:

public class MethodRunner {
     public T RunMethod<T>(Func<T> method) {
          method.Invoke();
     }
}

I have a class with a custom attribute that looks like this:

public class MyClass {
     [MyAttribute("somevalue")]
     public string SayHello(string message) {
         Console.WriteLine(message);
         return message;
     }
}

I can then call MyClass.SayHello by writing

var runner = new MethodRunner();
var myClass = new MyClass();

runner.RunMethod(() => myClass.SayHello("hello!"));

What I would like to do is, in the body of MethodRunner.RunMethod, use reflection to see the parameter of the MyAttribute class on MyClass.SayHello. However, I'm not sure how to get there. All I can see using reflection is the lambda expression itself, not its contents.

3
  • 3
    Short answer: You can't (do it easily). If you can say what problem you're trying to solve instead, it will be easy to answer. Oct 22, 2014 at 19:43
  • It's a lambda expression (yes - b before d - not just lamba as you spelled it twice)
    – marc_s
    Oct 22, 2014 at 19:46
  • Believe, you have to use Expression instead of Func. That will get you a lot more access to the information.
    – TyCobb
    Oct 22, 2014 at 19:47

1 Answer 1

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It is easy if you are able to change Func<T> into an Expression<Func<T>> instead.

Here is an example if that is possible:

public class MethodRunner {
     public T RunMethod<T>(Expression<Func<T>> method) {
          var body = method.Body as MethodCallExpression;
          if (body == null)
              throw new NotSupportedException();

           var attributes = body.Method.GetCustomAttributes(false);

           // Do something with Attributes

           return expression.Compile().Invoke();
     }
}

The difficulty when just using Func<T> with () => is that the compiler will generate an actual method. As far as I am aware, you cannot grab "lines" of code out of a method. The one way around this which does not help you since you have parameters is to use RunMethod(myClass.SayHello) instead of RunMethod(() => myClass.SayHello).

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