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Home/ Questions/Q 626797
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T19:27:28+00:00 2026-05-13T19:27:28+00:00

I have a simple question about .net delegates. Say I have something like this:

  • 0

I have a simple question about .net delegates. Say I have something like this:

    public void Invoke(Action<T> action)
    {
        Invoke(() => action(this.Value));
    }

    public void Invoke(Action action)
    {
        m_TaskQueue.Enqueue(action);
    }

The first function encloses a reference to this.Value. During runtime, when the first, method with generic parameter gets called, it will provide this.Value somehow to the second one, but how? These came into my mind:

  • Call by value (struct) – the current value of this.Value gets passed, so if the m_TaskQueue executes it 5 minutes later, the value will not be in its recent state, it will be whatever it was when first referencing.
  • Call by reference (reference type) – then the most recent state of Value will be referenced during execution of action but if I change this.Value to another reference before execution of action, it will still be pointing to the old reference
  • Call by name (both) – where this.Value will be evaluated when the action gets called. I believe the actual implementation would be holding a reference to this then evaluate Value on that during actual execution of delegate since there is no call by name.

I assume it would be Call of name style but could not find any documentation so wondering if it is a well-defined behavior. This class is something like an Actor in Scala or Erlang so I need it to be thread safe. I do not want Invoke function to dereference Value immediately, that will be done in a safe thread for this object by m_TaskQueue.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T19:27:29+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 7:27 pm

    Let me answer your question by describing what code we actually generate for this. I’ll rename your confusingly-named other Invoke method; it’s not necessary to understanding what’s going on here.

    Suppose you said

    class C<T>
    {
      public T Value;
      public void Invoke(Action<T> action) 
      { 
          Frob(() => action(this.Value)); 
      } 
      public void Frob(Action action) 
      {  // whatever
      } 
    }
    

    The compiler generates code as though you had actually written:

    class C<T>
    {
      public T Value;
    
      private class CLOSURE
      {
         public Action<T> ACTION;
         public C<T> THIS;
         public void METHOD()
         {
           this.ACTION(this.THIS.Value);
         }
      }
    
      public void Invoke(Action<T> action) 
      { 
          CLOSURE closure = new CLOSURE();
          closure.THIS = this;
          closure.ACTION = action;
          Frob(new Action(closure.METHOD)); 
      } 
      public void Frob(Action action) 
      {  // whatever
      } 
    }
    

    Does that answer your question?

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