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Home/ Questions/Q 3278120
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T19:26:45+00:00 2026-05-17T19:26:45+00:00

I’m implementing the IObservable<T> interface on some classes. I used Reflector to figure out

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I’m implementing the IObservable<T> interface on some classes. I used Reflector to figure out how this is typically done in Rx. Concerning how an observable keeps track of its subscribers and notifies them via their OnNext method, I stumbled upon code similar to this:

private List<Observer<T>> observers;

// subscribe a new observer:
public IDisposable Subscribe(IObserver<T> observer)
{
    observers.Add(observer);
    ...
}

// trigger all observers' OnNext method:
...
foreach (IObserver<T> observer in observers)
{
    observer.OnNext(value);
}

Since all delegates are multi-cast, couldn’t this be simplified to:

Action<T> observers;

// subscribe observer:
public IDisposable Subscribe(IObserver<T> observer)
{
    observers += observer.OnNext;
    ...
}

// trigger observers' OnNext:
...
observers(value);

Or are there specific advantages to the first approach (performance, threading/concurrency issues, …)?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T19:26:46+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 7:26 pm

    In general, calling the delegates individually gives you more control over the behavior:

    • If one delegate raises an exception you can keep calling the others, for example, or remove the faulted delegate from your list.
    • If you want to call the delegates in parallel, it’s really easy.
    • If you need to call them in a certain order, you can easily guarantee the correct order (I’m not sure that the order of multicast delegate calls is defined).
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