30

I have written a method below like this:

internal static IList<EmpowerTaxView> GetEmpowerTaxViewsByLongAgencyAndAgencyTaxTypes(
   IList<EmpowerCompanyTaxData> validEmpowerCompanyTaxDatas,
   IList<EmpowerTaxView> empowerTaxViews)
{
    IList<EmpowerTaxView> result = new List<EmpowerTaxView>();

    foreach (EmpowerCompanyTaxData empowerCompanyTaxData in validEmpowerCompanyTaxDatas)
    {
         IList<EmpowerTaxView> validEmpowerTaxViews =
           GetEmpowerTaxViewsByLongAgencyAndTaxType(
             empowerCompanyTaxData, empowerTaxViews);

         validEmpowerTaxViews.ToList().ForEach(delegate(EmpowerTaxView etv)
         {
              result.Add(etv);   
         });   
    }

    return result;
}

And for this method, the resharper says:

validEmpowerTaxViews.ToList().ForEach(delegate(EmpowerTaxView etv)
{
    result.Add(etv);   
});

Convert to Method Group. What does this mean and what should be done to get rid of this.

2
  • 5
    BTW, you don't have to "get rid of this": it's not a warning, just a suggestion. If you prefer to keep it in its current form because you find it clearer, it's not a problem. Aug 8, 2011 at 21:21
  • Yes, I know, but was curious how to get rid of the error and what method group was.
    – SaiBand
    Aug 9, 2011 at 22:21

4 Answers 4

70

What Resharper means is that you can express the ForEach code more simply by using the method group Add. Example:

validEmpowerTaxViews.ToList().Foreach(result.Add);

The method group defined by Add is compatible with the delegate expected by ForEach and hence the C# compiler will take care of doing the conversion. The default in Resharper is to prefer method groups over lambdas and explicit delegate creation statements.

3
  • Thanks JaredPar for your suggestion.
    – SaiBand
    Aug 9, 2011 at 22:21
  • 9
    +1 This is the only answer here that attempts to explain the "why".
    – TarkaDaal
    Sep 17, 2012 at 10:08
  • I see it's different terminology for eta reduction in functional programming languages such as Haskell where you drop the variable. Jan 6, 2022 at 12:57
7

JaredPar already provided the correct answer, I just wanted to suggest a simpler implementation of the method:

internal static IList<EmpowerTaxView> GetEmpowerTaxViewsByLongAgencyAndAgencyTaxTypes(
    IList<EmpowerCompanyTaxData> validEmpowerCompanyTaxDatas,
    IList<EmpowerTaxView> empowerTaxViews)
{
    var results =
        from empowerCompanyTaxData in validEmpowerCompanyTaxDatas
        from etv in GetEmpowerTaxViewsByLongAgencyAndTaxType(
            empowerCompanyTaxData, empowerTaxViews)
        select etv;
    return results.ToList();
}
1
  • Thanks for giving me a detailed answer.
    – SaiBand
    Aug 9, 2011 at 22:21
7

Accept Resharper's suggestion to see what changes it makes. You can always undo them.

If you aren't happy with the change and don't want Resharper suggesting it in future then you can disable that specific option - the others will remain available. See the answer here for details.

Resharper: vars

1
  • 1
    Thanks for telling me something new!
    – SaiBand
    Aug 9, 2011 at 22:20
1

From Microsoft website Method group is a set of overloaded methods resulting from a member lookup

You can check inspecting MSIL code that if you use the method group then it just makes a new delegate pointing to that method. But if you use a lambda expression then it generates a class with anonymous method under the hood. The result is that method group is required less memory then lambda and Resharper suggests you to optimize

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