Expression.ElementInit Method
Definition
Important
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Creates an ElementInit.
Overloads
ElementInit(MethodInfo, IEnumerable<Expression>) |
Creates an ElementInit, given an IEnumerable<T> as the second argument. |
ElementInit(MethodInfo, Expression[]) |
Creates an ElementInit, given an array of values as the second argument. |
ElementInit(MethodInfo, IEnumerable<Expression>)
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
Creates an ElementInit, given an IEnumerable<T> as the second argument.
public:
static System::Linq::Expressions::ElementInit ^ ElementInit(System::Reflection::MethodInfo ^ addMethod, System::Collections::Generic::IEnumerable<System::Linq::Expressions::Expression ^> ^ arguments);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit ElementInit (System.Reflection.MethodInfo addMethod, System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<System.Linq.Expressions.Expression> arguments);
static member ElementInit : System.Reflection.MethodInfo * seq<System.Linq.Expressions.Expression> -> System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit
Public Shared Function ElementInit (addMethod As MethodInfo, arguments As IEnumerable(Of Expression)) As ElementInit
Parameters
- addMethod
- MethodInfo
A MethodInfo to set the AddMethod property equal to.
- arguments
- IEnumerable<Expression>
An IEnumerable<T> that contains Expression objects to set the Arguments property equal to.
Returns
An ElementInit that has the AddMethod and Arguments properties set to the specified values.
Exceptions
addMethod
or arguments
is null
.
The method that addMethod
represents is not named "Add" (case insensitive).
-or-
The method that addMethod
represents is not an instance method.
-or-
arguments
does not contain the same number of elements as the number of parameters for the method that addMethod
represents.
-or-
The Type property of one or more elements of arguments
is not assignable to the type of the corresponding parameter of the method that addMethod
represents.
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to use the ElementInit(MethodInfo, Expression[]) method to create an ElementInit that represents calling the Add method to initialize an element of a dictionary collection.
string tree = "maple";
System.Reflection.MethodInfo addMethod = typeof(Dictionary<int, string>).GetMethod("Add");
// Create an ElementInit that represents calling
// Dictionary<int, string>.Add(tree.Length, tree).
System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit elementInit =
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.ElementInit(
addMethod,
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree.Length),
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree));
Console.WriteLine(elementInit.ToString());
// This code produces the following output:
//
// Void Add(Int32, System.String)(5,"maple")
Dim tree As String = "maple"
Dim addMethod As System.Reflection.MethodInfo = _
Type.GetType("System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary`2[System.Int32, System.String]").GetMethod("Add")
' Create an ElementInit that represents calling
' Dictionary(Of Integer, String).Add(tree.Length, tree).
Dim elementInit As System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit = _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.ElementInit( _
addMethod, _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree.Length), _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree))
Console.WriteLine(elementInit.ToString())
' This code produces the following output:
'
' Void Add(Int32, System.String)(5,"maple")
Remarks
The addMethod
parameter must represent an instance method named "Add" (case insensitive). The add method must have the same number of parameters as the number of elements in arguments
. The Type property of each element in arguments
must be assignable to the type of the corresponding parameter of the add method, possibly after quoting.
Note
An element will be quoted only if the corresponding method parameter is of type Expression. Quoting means the element is wrapped in a Quote node. The resulting node is a UnaryExpression whose Operand property is the element of arguments
.
Applies to
ElementInit(MethodInfo, Expression[])
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
- Source:
- ElementInit.cs
Creates an ElementInit, given an array of values as the second argument.
public:
static System::Linq::Expressions::ElementInit ^ ElementInit(System::Reflection::MethodInfo ^ addMethod, ... cli::array <System::Linq::Expressions::Expression ^> ^ arguments);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit ElementInit (System.Reflection.MethodInfo addMethod, params System.Linq.Expressions.Expression[] arguments);
static member ElementInit : System.Reflection.MethodInfo * System.Linq.Expressions.Expression[] -> System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit
Public Shared Function ElementInit (addMethod As MethodInfo, ParamArray arguments As Expression()) As ElementInit
Parameters
- addMethod
- MethodInfo
A MethodInfo to set the AddMethod property equal to.
- arguments
- Expression[]
An array of Expression objects to set the Arguments property equal to.
Returns
An ElementInit that has the AddMethod and Arguments properties set to the specified values.
Exceptions
addMethod
or arguments
is null
.
The method that addMethod represents is not named "Add" (case insensitive).
-or-
The method that addMethod represents is not an instance method.
-or-
arguments does not contain the same number of elements as the number of parameters for the method that addMethod represents.
-or-
The Type property of one or more elements of arguments
is not assignable to the type of the corresponding parameter of the method that addMethod
represents.
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to use the ElementInit(MethodInfo, Expression[]) method to create an ElementInit that represents calling the Add method to initialize an element of a dictionary collection.
string tree = "maple";
System.Reflection.MethodInfo addMethod = typeof(Dictionary<int, string>).GetMethod("Add");
// Create an ElementInit that represents calling
// Dictionary<int, string>.Add(tree.Length, tree).
System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit elementInit =
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.ElementInit(
addMethod,
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree.Length),
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree));
Console.WriteLine(elementInit.ToString());
// This code produces the following output:
//
// Void Add(Int32, System.String)(5,"maple")
Dim tree As String = "maple"
Dim addMethod As System.Reflection.MethodInfo = _
Type.GetType("System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary`2[System.Int32, System.String]").GetMethod("Add")
' Create an ElementInit that represents calling
' Dictionary(Of Integer, String).Add(tree.Length, tree).
Dim elementInit As System.Linq.Expressions.ElementInit = _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.ElementInit( _
addMethod, _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree.Length), _
System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(tree))
Console.WriteLine(elementInit.ToString())
' This code produces the following output:
'
' Void Add(Int32, System.String)(5,"maple")
Remarks
The addMethod
parameter must represent an instance method named "Add" (case insensitive). The add method must have the same number of parameters as the number of elements in arguments
. The Type property of each element in arguments
must be assignable to the type of the corresponding parameter of the add method, possibly after quoting.
Note
An element will be quoted only if the corresponding method parameter is of type Expression. Quoting means the element is wrapped in a Quote node. The resulting node is a UnaryExpression whose Operand property is the element of arguments
.