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Home/ Questions/Q 786139
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T20:59:30+00:00 2026-05-14T20:59:30+00:00

I have a class with a delegate declaration as follows… Public Class MyClass Public

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I have a class with a delegate declaration as follows…

Public Class MyClass  
    Public Delegate Function Getter(Of TResult)() As TResult    

    ''#the following code works.
    Public Shared Sub MyMethod(ByVal g As Getter(Of Boolean))
        ''#do stuff
    End Sub
End Class

However, I do not want to explicitly type the Getter delegate in the Method call. Why can I not declare the parameter as follows…

... (ByVal g As Getter(Of TResult))

Is there a way to do it?

My end goal was to be able to set a delegate for property setters and getters in the called class. But my reading indicates you can’t do that. So I put setter and getter methods in that class and then I want the calling class to set the delegate argument and then invoke. Is there a best practice for doing this.

I realize in the above example that I can set set the delegate variable from the calling class…but I am trying to create a singleton with tight encapsulation.

For the record, I can’t use any of the new delegate types declared in .net35.

Answers in C# are welcome.

Any thoughts?

Seth

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T20:59:31+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 8:59 pm

    You need to add a generic type parameter to the method:

    Public Shared Sub MyMethod(Of TResult) (ByVal g As Getter(Of TResult))
    

    In C#, that would be

    public static void MyMethod<TResult>(Getter<TResult> g) {
    
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