Delegate.Inequality(Delegate, Delegate) Operator
Definition
Important
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Determines whether the specified delegates are not equal.
public:
static bool operator !=(Delegate ^ d1, Delegate ^ d2);
public static bool operator != (Delegate d1, Delegate d2);
public static bool operator != (Delegate? d1, Delegate? d2);
static member op_Inequality : Delegate * Delegate -> bool
Public Shared Operator != (d1 As Delegate, d2 As Delegate) As Boolean
Parameters
- d1
- Delegate
The first delegate to compare.
- d2
- Delegate
The second delegate to compare.
Returns
true
if d1
is not equal to d2
; otherwise, false
.
Remarks
Two delegates are considered not equal if they are of different types, or have different methods, different targets, or different invocation lists.
If the two delegates are not of the same type, they are not considered equal.
The methods and targets are compared for equality as follows:
If the two methods being compared are both static and are the same method on the same class, the methods are considered equal and the targets are also considered equal.
If the two methods being compared are instance methods and are the same method on the same object, the methods are considered equal and the targets are also considered equal.
Otherwise, the methods are not considered to be equal and the targets are also not considered to be equal.
Two invocation lists are not equal if they have different sizes, if they are ordered differently, or if at least one element from one list represents a method or target that is different from that represented by its corresponding element in the other list.
The equivalent method for this operator is Delegate.Equals(Object)