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Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T18:27:05+00:00 2026-05-10T18:27:05+00:00

Is there a typedef equivalent in C#, or someway to get some sort of

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Is there a typedef equivalent in C#, or someway to get some sort of similar behaviour? I’ve done some googling, but everywhere I look seems to be negative. Currently I have a situation similar to the following:

class GenericClass<T>  {     public event EventHandler<EventData> MyEvent;     public class EventData : EventArgs { /* snip */ }     // ... snip } 

Now, it doesn’t take a rocket scientist to figure out that this can very quickly lead to a lot of typing (apologies for the horrible pun) when trying to implement a handler for that event. It’d end up being something like this:

GenericClass<int> gcInt = new GenericClass<int>; gcInt.MyEvent += new EventHandler<GenericClass<int>.EventData>(gcInt_MyEvent); // ...  private void gcInt_MyEvent(object sender, GenericClass<int>.EventData e) {     throw new NotImplementedException(); } 

Except, in my case, I was already using a complex type, not just an int. It’d be nice if it were possible to simplify this a little…

Edit: ie. perhaps typedefing the EventHandler instead of needing to redefine it to get similar behaviour.

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  1. 2026-05-10T18:27:05+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 6:27 pm

    No, there’s no true equivalent of typedef. You can use ‘using’ directives within one file, e.g.

    using CustomerList = System.Collections.Generic.List<Customer>; 

    but that will only impact that source file. In C and C++, my experience is that typedef is usually used within .h files which are included widely – so a single typedef can be used over a whole project. That ability does not exist in C#, because there’s no #include functionality in C# that would allow you to include the using directives from one file in another.

    Fortunately, the example you give does have a fix – implicit method group conversion. You can change your event subscription line to just:

    gcInt.MyEvent += gcInt_MyEvent; 

    🙂

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