An easy way that allows you to omit any parameters in any position, is taking advantage of nullable types as follows:
public void PrintValues(int? a = null, int? b = null, float? c = null, string s = "")
{
if(a.HasValue)
Console.Write(a);
else
Console.Write("-");
if(b.HasValue)
Console.Write(b);
else
Console.Write("-");
if(c.HasValue)
Console.Write(c);
else
Console.Write("-");
if(string.IsNullOrEmpty(s)) // Different check for strings
Console.Write(s);
else
Console.Write("-");
}
Strings are already nullable types so they don't need the ?.
Once you have this method, the following calls are all valid:
PrintValues (1, 2, 2.2f);
PrintValues (1, c: 1.2f);
PrintValues(b:100);
PrintValues (c: 1.2f, s: "hello");
PrintValues();
When you define a method that way, you have the freedom to set just the parameters you want by naming them.
This way of defining methods though adds additional checks, more lines of code and allows writing method calls that are heavy to the eye, i.e. PrintValues(null, 2, s:"ciao", c:null);
, so this style should be used sporadically in my opinion.
More information on named and optional parameters at the following link:
Named and Optional Arguments (C# Programming Guide) @ MSDN