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Home/ Questions/Q 3997472
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 20, 20262026-05-20T07:24:23+00:00 2026-05-20T07:24:23+00:00

I have a simple class with a property class Foo { string Title {

  • 0

I have a simple class with a property

class Foo 
{ 
    string Title { get; set; } 
}

I am trying to simplify data binding by calling a function like

BindToText(titleTextBox, ()=>foo.Title );

which is declared like

void BindToText<T>(Control control, Expression<Func<T>> property)
{
    var mex = property.Body as MemberExpression;
    string name = mex.Member.Name;

    control.DataBindings.Add("Text", ??? , name);
}

so what do I put in ??? for the instance of my Foo class. How do I get a refernce to the calling foo instance from the lambda expression?

edit:
The instance should be there somewhere because I can call property.Compile() and create a delegate that uses the foo instance inside my BindToText function. So my question is if this can be done without adding a reference to the instance in the function parameters. I call upon Occum’s Razor to yield the simplest solution.

edit 2:
What many have failed to notice is the closure that exists in accessing the instance of foo inside my function, if I compile the lambda. How come the compiler knows where to find the instance, and I don’t? I insist that there has to be an answer, without having to pass an extra argument.


Solution

Thanks to VirtualBlackFox the solution is such:

void BindText<T>(TextBoxBase text, Expression<Func<T>> property)
{
    var mex = property.Body as MemberExpression;
    string name = mex.Member.Name;
    var fex = mex.Expression as MemberExpression;
    var cex = fex.Expression as ConstantExpression;            
    var fld = fex.Member as FieldInfo;
    var x = fld.GetValue(cex.Value);
    text.DataBindings.Add("Text", x, name);            
}

which alows me to simply type BindText(titleText, () => foo.Title);.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-20T07:24:23+00:00Added an answer on May 20, 2026 at 7:24 am

    Small LINQPad sample of what you want :

    void Foo<T>(Expression<Func<T>> prop)
    {
        var propertyGetExpression = prop.Body as MemberExpression;
    
        // Display the property you are accessing, here "Height"
        propertyGetExpression.Member.Name.Dump();
    
        // "s" is replaced by a field access on a compiler-generated class from the closure
        var fieldOnClosureExpression = propertyGetExpression.Expression as MemberExpression;
    
        // Find the compiler-generated class
        var closureClassExpression = fieldOnClosureExpression.Expression as ConstantExpression;
        var closureClassInstance = closureClassExpression.Value;
    
        // Find the field value, in this case it's a reference to the "s" variable
        var closureFieldInfo = fieldOnClosureExpression.Member as FieldInfo;
        var closureFieldValue = closureFieldInfo.GetValue(closureClassInstance);
    
        closureFieldValue.Dump();
    
        // We know that the Expression is a property access so we get the PropertyInfo instance
        // And even access the value (yes compiling the expression would have been simpler :D)
        var propertyInfo = propertyGetExpression.Member as PropertyInfo;
        var propertyValue = propertyInfo.GetValue(closureFieldValue, null);
        propertyValue.Dump();
    }
    
    void Main()
    {
        string s = "Hello world";
        Foo(() => s.Length);
    }
    
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