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Well, simply, if you have an Entity class, and you want to use lambda expressions on that Entity to determine if something is valid (returning boolean), you could use a Func.

So, given an Entity:

 class Entity
 {
      public string MyProperty { get; set; }
 }

You could define a ValidationRule class for that like this:

 class ValidationRule<T> where T : Entity
 {
      private Func<T, bool> _rule;

      public ValidationRule(Func<T, bool> rule)
      {
           _rule = rule;
      }

      public bool IsValid(T entity)
      {
           return _rule(entity);
      }
 }

Then you could use it like this:

 var myEntity = new Entity() { MyProperty = "Hello World" };
 var rule = new ValidationRule<Entity>(entity => entity.MyProperty == "Hello World");

 var valid = rule.IsValid(myEntity);

Of course, that's just one possible solution.

If you remove the generic constraint above ("where T : Entity"), you could make this a generic rules engine that could be used with any POCO. You wouldn't have to derive a class for every type of usage you need. So if I wanted to use this same class on a TextBox, I could use the following (after removing the generic constraint):

 var rule = new ValidationRule<TextBox>(tb => tb.Text.Length > 0);
 rule.IsValid(myTextBox);

It's pretty flexible this way. Using lambda expressions and generics together is very powerful. Instead of accepting Func or Action, you could accept an Expression> or Expression> and have direct access to the express tree to automatically investigate things like the name of a method or property, what type of expression it is, etc. And people using your class would not have to change a single line of code.

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Well, simply, if you have an Entity class, and you want to use lambda expressions on that Entity to determine if something is valid (returning boolean), you could use a Func.

So, given an Entity:

 class Entity
 {
      public string MyProperty { get; set; }
 }

You could define a ValidationRule class for that like this:

 class ValidationRule<T> where T : Entity
 {
      private Func<T, bool> _rule;

      public ValidationRule(Func<T, bool> rule)
      {
           _rule = rule;
      }

      public bool IsValid(T entity)
      {
           return _rule(entity);
      }
 }

Then you could use it like this:

 var myEntity = new Entity() { MyProperty = "Hello World" };
 var rule = new ValidationRule<Entity>(entity => entity.MyProperty == "Hello World");

 var valid = rule.IsValid(myEntity);

Of course, that's just one possible solution.

If you remove the generic constraint above ("where T : Entity"), you could make this a generic rules engine that could be used with any POCO. You wouldn't have to derive a class for every type of usage you need. So if I wanted to use this same class on a TextBox, I could use the following (after removing the generic constraint):

 var rule = new ValidationRule<TextBox>(tb => tb.Text.Length > 0);
 rule.IsValid(myTextBox);

It's pretty flexible this way. Using lambda expressions and generics together is very powerful.