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Home/ Questions/Q 7873493
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 3, 20262026-06-03T02:31:47+00:00 2026-06-03T02:31:47+00:00

delegate IEnumerable<T> GetFromSQLDelegate<T>(…); public GetFromSQLDelegate myFunctionToCall; The above does not compile because myFunctionToCall does

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delegate IEnumerable<T> GetFromSQLDelegate<T>(...);
public GetFromSQLDelegate myFunctionToCall;

The above does not compile because myFunctionToCall does not specify a type. I’m trying to “store” a generic delegate such that I can invoke it later as a regular generic function:

// ... somewhere in another code base ...
return MyObject.myFunctionToCall<string>(...);

C# complains because I’m not specifying a concrete type on the delegate storage property. Is there a (good) way to “store” a delegate capable of invoking a generic function without implementing various concrete type delegate scenarios?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-03T02:31:49+00:00Added an answer on June 3, 2026 at 2:31 am

    You can store the value as System.Delegate, make it private, and define a function GetDelegate<T> that casts your stored delegate to the appropriate type:

    private Delegate storedDelegate;
    
    public myFunctionToCall<T> GetDelegate<T>() {
        return (myFunctionToCall<T>)storedDelegate;
    }
    

    You can then call it like this:

    return MyObject.GetDelegate<string>()(...);
    

    There is a little bit of ugliness going on around the ()(...) syntax, but it should probably do the trick.

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