I have a list of Func and I want to add elements. If I add them on Start like below, no problem:
public List<System.Func<bool>> conditions = new List<System.Func<bool>>();
void Start()
{
conditions.Add(Iamdead);
conditions.Add(Iamalive);
}
bool Iamdead()
{
...
return ...;
}
bool Iamalive()
{
...
return ...;
}
But I want to define the list without Start so that I have a clean list of methods that I can see as elements in a row. I have tried the classic format:
public List<System.Func<bool>> conditions = new List<System.Func<bool>>()
{
bool Iamdead()
{
...
return ...;
}
,
bool Iamalive()
{
...
return ...;
}
};
This gave me parsing error
I tried like that:
public List<System.Func<bool>> conditions = new List<System.Func<bool>>()
{
Iamdead,Iamalive
};
static bool Iamdead()
{
...
return ...;
}
static bool Iamalive()
{
...
return ...;
}
This worked only if the methods are static but I do not want them to be static. Without static, it doesn't work. It seems I couldn't understand the data structure here. Can anyone tell me the correct way of defining Func in a list?
Thanks
I strongly suspect the problem is that you're trying to access this
(implicitly) within a field initializer. You're not allowed to do that. Just move the initialization into a constructor:
// You don't really use public fields, do you?
private readonly List<Func<bool>> conditions;
public MyClass()
{
conditions = new List<Func<bool>> { Method1, Method2 };
}
private bool Method1() { ... }
private bool Method2() { ... }
(I'm assuming you actually want your conditions to depend on state within the instance. If they don't, you don't need this
. If the methods aren't used other than for these conditions, and they're short enough, you might want to use lambda expressions instead.)
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