
What's the difference between "general" and "generic"?
Apr 30, 2014 · Generic is the opposite of specific. Generic and specific refer to the identification of a fact. Specific means a fact that has been specified. If you ask for (specify) a pain reliever, …
Syntax and Sample Usage of _Generic in C11 - Stack Overflow
Mar 26, 2015 · Note about the placing of the function parameter list When using a Generic() to select a function based on the controlling-expression you have the choice of including the …
How can I pass in a func with a generic type parameter?
Mar 24, 2014 · You can certainly define generic delegates, after all, that's exactly what Func and Action are. They are treated as generic definitions, just like generic interfaces and classes are. …
Creating a generic method in C# - Stack Overflow
Jan 27, 2010 · I am trying to combine a bunch of similar methods into a generic method. I have several methods that return the value of a querystring, or null if that querystring does not exist …
Nullable type as a generic parameter possible? - Stack Overflow
Oct 16, 2008 · The type 'int?' must be a non-nullable value type in order to use it as parameter 'T' in the generic type or method Is specifying a nullable type as a generic parameter at all possible?
Using List<T> in C# (Generics) - Stack Overflow
Oct 2, 2013 · 18 You need to add the generic type parameter for T to your method: void MyMethod<T>(List<T> list) { The compiler doesn't know what T represents, otherwise.
c# - How to compare values of generic types? - Stack Overflow
So, two questions: Why do we observe this weird behaviour? What keeps us from comparing the values of generic types which are known to be IComparable? Doesn't it somehow defeat the …
How do you provide a default type for generics? - Stack Overflow
Jul 8, 2009 · The generic parameter type will be the same for all methods, so I would like it at the class level. I know I could make a generic version and then inherit from it for the int version, …
Using a 'using alias = class' with generic types? [duplicate]
using List<T> = System.Collections.Generic.List<T>; But that doesn't compile, so is there any way to achieve creating this alias while leaving the type as generic?
How to get the type of T from a member of a generic class or …
This appears to address the question of whether the type is a list-y sort of thing, but the question is more about how to determine what generic type parameter a type that is known to be a List …