By using the params keyword, a method parameter can be specified which takes a variable number of arguments or even no argument.
Can you pass additional type of parameters after using params in function definition?
No! additional parameters are not permitted after the params keyword in a method declaration. Only one params keyword is allowed in a method declaration.
Can you pass additional type of parameters after using params in function definition?
No! additional parameters are not permitted after the params keyword in a method declaration. Only one params keyword is allowed in a method declaration.
public class MyClass { public static void UseParams(params int[] list) { for (int i = 0; i < list.Length; i++) { Console.Write(list[i] + " "); } Console.WriteLine(); } public static void UseParams2(params object[] list) { for (int i = 0; i < list.Length; i++) { Console.Write(list[i] + " "); } Console.WriteLine(); } static void Main() { // You can send a comma-separated list of arguments of the // specified type. UseParams(1, 2, 3, 4); UseParams2(1, 'a', "test"); // A params parameter accepts zero or more arguments. // The following calling statement displays only a blank line. UseParams2(); // An array argument can be passed, as long as the array // type matches the parameter type of the method being called. int[] myIntArray = { 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 }; UseParams(myIntArray); object[] myObjArray = { 2, 'b', "test", "again" }; UseParams2(myObjArray); // The following call causes a compiler error because the object // array cannot be converted into an integer array. //UseParams(myObjArray); // The following call does not cause an error, but the entire // integer array becomes the first element of the params array. UseParams2(myIntArray); } } /* Output: 1 2 3 4 1 a test 5 6 7 8 9 2 b test again System.Int32[] */
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