21

So i have 2 classes named A and B.

A has a method "public void Foo()".

B has several other methods.

What i need is a variable in class B, that will be assigned the Foo() method of class A. This variable should afterwards be "executed" (=> so it should execute the assigned method of class A).

How to do this?

2 Answers 2

58

It sounds like you want to use a delegate here.

Basically, you can add, in class "B":

class B
{
    public Action TheMethod { get; set; }
}

class A
{
    public static void Foo() { Console.WriteLine("Foo"); }
    public static void Bar() { Console.WriteLine("Bar"); }
}

You could then set:

B b = new B();

b.TheMethod = A.Foo; // Assign the delegate
b.TheMethod(); // Invoke the delegate...

b.TheMethod = A.Bar;
b.TheMethod(); // Invoke the delegate...

This would print out "Foo" then "Bar".

2
  • thx a lot this is working. i was missing the "Action" keyword :)
    – nr1
    Sep 9, 2011 at 20:46
  • 2
    @nr1: There are actually many options there - Action will allow you to use a method that doesn't return a value and takes no parameters. You can use Func<int,string> if your methods all take an int and return a string, for example. Sep 9, 2011 at 20:52
17

Reed gave you the right answer. It's also worth pointing out that you can use other delegate signatures besides Action.

There are generic versions like Action<T> (one arg), Action<T1, T2> (two args), etc... Also if your method has a return type, check out Func<T, TResult>.

Or of course you can define your own delegate type.

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