Because Invoke
/BeginInvoke
accepts Delegate
(rather than a typed delegate), you need to tell the compiler what type of delegate to create ; MethodInvoker
(2.0) or Action
(3.5) are common choices (note they have the same signature); like so:
control.Invoke((MethodInvoker) delegate {this.Text = "Hi";});
If you need to pass in parameters, then "captured variables" are the way:
string message = "Hi";
control.Invoke((MethodInvoker) delegate {this.Text = message;});
(caveat: you need to be a bit cautious if using captures async, but sync is fine - i.e. the above is fine)
Another option is to write an extension method:
public static void Invoke(this Control control, Action action)
{
control.Invoke((Delegate)action);
}
then:
this.Invoke(delegate { this.Text = "hi"; });
// or since we are using C# 3.0
this.Invoke(() => { this.Text = "hi"; });
You can of course do the same with BeginInvoke
:
public static void BeginInvoke(this Control control, Action action)
{
control.BeginInvoke((Delegate)action);
}
If you can't use C# 3.0, you could do the same with a regular instance method, presumably in a Form
base-class.
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