Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) Constructor
Definition
Important
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Initializes a new instance of the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7> class.
public:
Tuple(T1 item1, T2 item2, T3 item3, T4 item4, T5 item5, T6 item6, T7 item7);
public Tuple (T1 item1, T2 item2, T3 item3, T4 item4, T5 item5, T6 item6, T7 item7);
new Tuple<'T1, 'T2, 'T3, 'T4, 'T5, 'T6, 'T7> : 'T1 * 'T2 * 'T3 * 'T4 * 'T5 * 'T6 * 'T7 -> Tuple<'T1, 'T2, 'T3, 'T4, 'T5, 'T6, 'T7>
Public Sub New (item1 As T1, item2 As T2, item3 As T3, item4 As T4, item5 As T5, item6 As T6, item7 As T7)
Parameters
- item1
- T1
The value of the tuple's first component.
- item2
- T2
The value of the tuple's second component.
- item3
- T3
The value of the tuple's third component.
- item4
- T4
The value of the tuple's fourth component.
- item5
- T5
The value of the tuple's fifth component.
- item6
- T6
The value of the tuple's sixth component.
- item7
- T7
The value of the tuple's seventh component.
Remarks
You can use the static Tuple.Create<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) method to instantiate a 7-tuple object without having to explicitly specify the types of its components. The following example uses the Tuple.Create<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) method to instantiate a 7-tuple whose first component is of type String and whose remaining components are of type Int32.
var tuple7 = Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92);
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
tuple7.Item7);
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
let tuple7 =
Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
printfn
$"Test scores for {tuple7.Item1}: {tuple7.Item2}, {tuple7.Item3}, {tuple7.Item4}, {tuple7.Item5}, {tuple7.Item6}, {tuple7.Item7}"
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
Dim tuple7 = Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
tuple7.Item7)
' Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
This is equivalent to the following call to the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7> class constructor.
var tuple7 = new Tuple<string, int, int, int, int, int, int>
("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92);
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
tuple7.Item7);
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
let tuple7 =
Tuple<string, int, int, int, int, int, int>("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
printfn
$"Test scores for {tuple7.Item1}: {tuple7.Item2}, {tuple7.Item3}, {tuple7.Item4}, {tuple7.Item5}, {tuple7.Item6}, {tuple7.Item7}"
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
Dim tuple7 = New Tuple(Of String, Integer, Integer,
Integer, Integer, Integer, Integer) _
("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
tuple7.Item7)
' Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
Applies to
.NET