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Home/ Questions/Q 861313
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T08:57:34+00:00 2026-05-15T08:57:34+00:00

When I saw Darins suggestion here .. IEnumerable<Process> processes = new[] { process1, process2

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When I saw Darins suggestion here ..

IEnumerable<Process> processes = 
    new[] { "process1", "process2" } 
    .SelectMany(Process.GetProcessesByName);

( process.getprocessesbyname() )

.. I was a bit intrigued and I tried it in VS2008 with .NET 3.5 – and it did not compiling unless I changed it to ..

IEnumerable<Process> res = 
  new string[] { "notepad", "firefox", "outlook" }
    .SelectMany(s => Process.GetProcessesByName(s));

Having read some Darins answers before I suspected that it was me that were the problem, and when I later got my hands on a VS2010 with.NET 4.0 – as expected – the original suggestion worked beautifully.

My question is: What have happened from 3.5 to 4.0 that makes this (new syntax) possible? Is it the extensionmethods that have been extended(hmm) or new rules for lambda syntax or?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T08:57:35+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 8:57 am

    It seems that the delegate selection is much more intelligent in the new version of C# (C# 4.0 vs. C# 3.0… not the version of .NET.) This idea was available in VS2008, but it had problems resolving which version of the method to use when there were multiple overloads. The method is selected at compilation, so I have to believe that this has more to do with the updated compiler than with the version of .NET. You will probably find that you can use the new overload ability with solutions compiled for .NET 2.0 in VS2010.

    For example, this works in VS2008

    var ret = new[] { "Hello", "World", "!!!" }.Aggregate(Path.Combine);
    // this is the value of ret => Hello\World\!!!
    
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