My program had a simple function newline() that would provide an int value to a int variable x.
public void autowordwrap(string wrapthisword)
{
//some code that does things irrelevant to this problem, with the string
x=newline();
//assume x is already declared properly
//do something with value from x
}
Problem started when I introduced a new function sameline()
I want to be able to do any one of these conveniently, at a time:
public void autowordwrap(string wrapthisword)
{
x=newline();
}
or,
public void autowordwrap(string wrapthisword)
{
x=sameline();
}
So, I thought of trying this:
public void autowordwrap(string wrapthisword, Func<void,int> linefunc)
{
x=linefunc;
}
which I can later call on requirement as:
autowordwrap(mystring,newline());
or,
autowordwrap(mystring,sameline());
But it is not quite working out for me!
It says keyword 'void' cannot be used in this context
Problem is:
What I want to do should be simple enough but I'm not quite understanding how it works. I understand that Action<> works for functions without return type and Func<> works for function with a return type.[Reference-1].
What I've gathered so far is:
MSDN tells me: To reference a method that has no parameters and returns void (or in Visual Basic, that is declared as a Sub rather than as a Function), use the Action delegate instead.
- Since my newline() function is defined as an int-datatype, and it returns an integer after running, I thought Action<> didn't suit my needs.
This answer has what I need but for the life of me, I couldn't make it work for my specific purpose.
Problem Breakdown
- I have two functions newline() and sameline()
- I wish to pass any ONE out of the TWO of them as an argument of the function autowordwrap()
which means, in my Main Program, I will be using autowordwrap(somestring, newline()); or autowordwrap(somestring, sameline()); wherever necessary!
- both newline() and sameline() are int-datatype functions who return integer value upon being called. For the sake of this problem, lets store it in int x
- while trying to solve this, I'm assuming that using Func is used to pass nothing onto the function as an argument while calling example: newline(void) and the int part is used to define the function newline() or any function represented by delegate Func<> as one which returns an int value.
- I have realized that what I have seemed to learn must be fundamentally flawed somehow somewhere. Please enlighten me. Reference links would be very helpful too.
- Solving this problem in any way is acceptable. You do not need to do this in the way that I may have unintentionally rigidly outlined. Please feel free to explore creative solutions as long as they fulfill the intended purpose in C#
Yes, I acknowledge that THIS is a possible duplicate of this question but I couldn't make much sense of the helpful answer posted over there. Assuming, this will be the case for many future readers, I'm making this question and linking it to that question so that it may be helpful to people who'll face this same problem in the future.
Endnote:
This Question has been solved! The marked answer lays down the way for doing this and there is also some great explanation in the answers. If you are facing some errors while solving a similar question of this nature, you might be able to fix those my looking over screenshots of my own errors. They're here in the revision section no.4