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I'm just starting out playing around with Linq Expressions and I've hit a wall. I need to create an Expression Tree from an Action. Unfortunetly I can't get the Action as an Expression, this is basically what I've got to work with:

public void Something(Action action){}

I need access to the body of the Action to extract variables and values.

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An Action is not an Expression; it is simply a delegate (that might have been an expression at some point, might have been a lambda, and might not have been either).

To make this workable, you would need to refactor to:

public void Something(Expression<Action> action) {...}

Also, C# 3.0 / .NET 3.5 lambda expressions don't work very well for Action-type expressions. You are very limited in what you can express. Func-type expressions work better. In .NET 4.0 (CTP) there is much more flexibility here, although it still isn't clear what the language (C# 4.0) will offer by way of lambdas.

Basically, I'm not sure that you can (conveniently) do what you hope using Expression.

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That's what I thought. This is an Action coming from a Boo file, so luckly I can get access to the Boo expressions and get what I need :) – Chris Canal Nov 10 '08 at 15:58

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