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Home/ Questions/Q 7525161
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 30, 20262026-05-30T03:27:45+00:00 2026-05-30T03:27:45+00:00

I have a method like this: public List<MyObjects> All<TEntity>(params LambdaExpression[] exprs) with the intention

  • 0

I have a method like this:

public List<MyObjects> All<TEntity>(params LambdaExpression[] exprs)

with the intention that I can call it like this:

All<SomeObject>(a => a.Collection1, a=> a.Collection2, a=>a.Collection3);

However, my method signature does not appear to take the expression correctly. What am I doing wrong? How would I write the method signature to get the desired effect?

edited: I realized that my example method call wasn’t accurately reflecting what I was trying to do in real life 🙂

thanks!!

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-30T03:27:47+00:00Added an answer on May 30, 2026 at 3:27 am

    Perhaps the cleanest way in this case would be to write an extension method.

    public static class MyExtensions
    {
        public static List<TEntity> All<TEntity, TResult>(
            this TEntity entity,
            params Func<TEntity, TResult>[] exprs)
        {
            if (entity == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("entity");
            }
            if (exprs == null)
            {
                throw new ArgumentNullException("exprs");
            }
    
            // TODO: Implementation required
            throw new NotImplementedException();
        }
    }
    

    Note that you don’t have to specify type arguments when you’re calling the method because of the type inference.

    class C
    {
        public List<string> Collection1 {get; set;}
        public List<string> Collection2 {get; set;}
        public List<string> Collection3 {get; set;}
        // ...
    }
    // ...
    var c = new C();            
    c.All(x => x.Collection1, x => x.Collection2, x => x.Collection3);
    
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