Is there a way in C# to reference a class constructor as a standard function? The reason is that Visual Studio complains about modifying functions with lambdas in them, and often its a simple sele开发者_高级运维ct statement.
For example var ItemColors = selectedColors.Select (x => new SolidColorBrush(x));
, where selectedColors is just an IEnumerable<System.Windows.Media.Color>
.
Technically speaking, shouldn't the lambda be redundant? select takes a function accepting a type T and returning type U. The solid color brush takes (the correct) type T here and returns a U. Only I see no way to do this in C#. In F# it would be something like let ItemColors = map selectedColors (new SolidColorBrush)
.
TL;DR: I guess I'm looking for the valid form of var ItemColors = selectedColors.select (new SolidColorBrush)
which doens't require a lamba. Is this possible in C# or does the language have no way to express this construct?
No you cannot reference a C# constructor as a method group and pass it as a delegate parameter. The best way to do so is via the lambda syntax in your question.
You could lay out a formal method:
private static SolidColorBrush Transform(Color color)
{
return new SolidColorBrush(color);
}
Then you can use Select
like this:
var ItemColors = selectedColors.Select(Transform);
I'm not sure I understand you correctly. But are you talking about a factory
?
This way you can pass a value to the factory and it will create an instance for you.
SolidColorBrush brush = ColorBrushFactory.BrushFrom(color);
Hope this helped.
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