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Home/ Questions/Q 506773
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T06:44:08+00:00 2026-05-13T06:44:08+00:00

Consider the following class public class PlanetKrypton { public static void CallSuperManforHelp(string helpMessage, params

  • 0

Consider the following class

public class PlanetKrypton
 {
  public static void CallSuperManforHelp(string helpMessage, params object[] kryptonParams)
  {
   Console.WriteLine(String.Format(helpMessage,kryptonParams));
  }

  public static void CallSuperManforHelp(string helpMessage ,string sender,string senderZipCode)
  {
   Console.WriteLine("{0} from {1}. I am {2}", helpMessage, sender, senderZipCode);
  }
 }

 public class ConsoleMan
 {
  public static void Main(string[] args)
  {
   string helpMessage = "I have a flat tire";
   string sender = "Jerry";
   int wrongZipType = 12345;


   PlanetKrypton.CallSuperManforHelp(helpMessage, sender, wrongZipType);
   PlanetKrypton.CallSuperManforHelp(helpMessage);
  }
 }

Now, if I have a more strongly typed method signature in the first method, I would have gotten a compile time error for both these method calls.

Are there any “best practices” for using params in method signature ?

Edit:Am making this a community wiki

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T06:44:09+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 6:44 am

    I would avoid using params[] object. What I would do is create a class that encapsulates the three strings in your second overload:

    public class HelpStuff
    {
       public string Message{get;set;}
       public string Help{get;set;}
       public string ZipCode{get;set;}
    }
    

    Then have two overloads like this:

      public static void CallSuperManforHelp(string helpMessage, params string[] kryptonParams)
        {
                //do work
        }
    
        public static void CallSuperManforHelp(HelpStuff helpStuff)
        {
               //do work
        }
    
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