Modifier

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Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) Constructor

Definition

Initializes a new instance of the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7> class.

public:
 Tuple(T1 item1, T2 item2, T3 item3, T4 item4, T5 item5, T6 item6, T7 item7);
public Tuple (T1 item1, T2 item2, T3 item3, T4 item4, T5 item5, T6 item6, T7 item7);
new Tuple<'T1, 'T2, 'T3, 'T4, 'T5, 'T6, 'T7> : 'T1 * 'T2 * 'T3 * 'T4 * 'T5 * 'T6 * 'T7 -> Tuple<'T1, 'T2, 'T3, 'T4, 'T5, 'T6, 'T7>
Public Sub New (item1 As T1, item2 As T2, item3 As T3, item4 As T4, item5 As T5, item6 As T6, item7 As T7)

Parameters

item1
T1

The value of the tuple's first component.

item2
T2

The value of the tuple's second component.

item3
T3

The value of the tuple's third component.

item4
T4

The value of the tuple's fourth component.

item5
T5

The value of the tuple's fifth component.

item6
T6

The value of the tuple's sixth component.

item7
T7

The value of the tuple's seventh component.

Remarks

You can use the static Tuple.Create<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) method to instantiate a 7-tuple object without having to explicitly specify the types of its components. The following example uses the Tuple.Create<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7>(T1, T2, T3, T4, T5, T6, T7) method to instantiate a 7-tuple whose first component is of type String and whose remaining components are of type Int32.

var tuple7 = Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92);
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
                  tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
                  tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
                  tuple7.Item7);
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
let tuple7 =
    Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)

printfn
    $"Test scores for {tuple7.Item1}: {tuple7.Item2}, {tuple7.Item3}, {tuple7.Item4}, {tuple7.Item5}, {tuple7.Item6}, {tuple7.Item7}"
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
Dim tuple7 = Tuple.Create("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
                  tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
                  tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
                  tuple7.Item7)
' Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92

This is equivalent to the following call to the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4,T5,T6,T7> class constructor.

var tuple7 = new Tuple<string, int, int, int, int, int, int>
                      ("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92);
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
                  tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
                  tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
                  tuple7.Item7);
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
let tuple7 =
    Tuple<string, int, int, int, int, int, int>("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)

printfn
    $"Test scores for {tuple7.Item1}: {tuple7.Item2}, {tuple7.Item3}, {tuple7.Item4}, {tuple7.Item5}, {tuple7.Item6}, {tuple7.Item7}"
// Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92
Dim tuple7 = New Tuple(Of String, Integer, Integer, 
                       Integer, Integer, Integer, Integer) _
                       ("Jane", 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92)
Console.WriteLine("Test scores for {0}: {1}, {2}, {3}, {4}, {5}, {6}",
                  tuple7.Item1, tuple7.Item2, tuple7.Item3,
                  tuple7.Item4, tuple7.Item5, tuple7.Item6,
                  tuple7.Item7)
' Displays Test scores for Jane: 90, 87, 93, 67, 100, 92

Applies to