I was reading this question, and read this response
This is actually a fantastic feature. This lets you have a closure that accesses something normally hidden, say, a private class variable, and let it manipulate it in a controlled way as a response to something like an event.
You can simulate what you want quite easily by creating a local copy of the variable, and using that.
Would we need to implement Lock() in this situation?
What would that look like?
According to Eric Lippert a compiler makes code look like this:
private class Locals
{
public int count;
public void Anonymous()
{
this.count++;
}
}
public Action Counter()
{
Locals locals = new Locals();
locals.count = 0;
Action counter = new Action(locals.Anonymous);
return counter;
}
What does the Lambda would look like, as well as the long-form code?