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Expression.MemberInit Method

Definition

Represents an expression that creates a new object and initializes a property of the object.

Overloads

MemberInit(NewExpression, IEnumerable<MemberBinding>)

Represents an expression that creates a new object and initializes a property of the object.

MemberInit(NewExpression, MemberBinding[])

Creates a MemberInitExpression.

MemberInit(NewExpression, IEnumerable<MemberBinding>)

Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs
Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs
Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs

Represents an expression that creates a new object and initializes a property of the object.

public:
 static System::Linq::Expressions::MemberInitExpression ^ MemberInit(System::Linq::Expressions::NewExpression ^ newExpression, System::Collections::Generic::IEnumerable<System::Linq::Expressions::MemberBinding ^> ^ bindings);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression MemberInit (System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression newExpression, System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding> bindings);
static member MemberInit : System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression * seq<System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding> -> System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression
Public Shared Function MemberInit (newExpression As NewExpression, bindings As IEnumerable(Of MemberBinding)) As MemberInitExpression

Parameters

newExpression
NewExpression

A NewExpression to set the NewExpression property equal to.

bindings
IEnumerable<MemberBinding>

An IEnumerable<T> that contains MemberBinding objects to use to populate the Bindings collection.

Returns

A MemberInitExpression that has the NodeType property equal to MemberInit and the NewExpression and Bindings properties set to the specified values.

Exceptions

newExpression or bindings is null.

The Member property of an element of bindings does not represent a member of the type that newExpression.Type represents.

Examples

The following example demonstrates an expression that creates a new object and initializes a property of the object.


// Add the following directive to your file:
// using System.Linq.Expressions;

class TestMemberInitClass
{
    public int sample { get; set; }
}

static void MemberInit()
{
    // This expression creates a new TestMemberInitClass object
    // and assigns 10 to its sample property.
    Expression testExpr = Expression.MemberInit(
        Expression.New(typeof(TestMemberInitClass)),
        new List<MemberBinding>() {
            Expression.Bind(typeof(TestMemberInitClass).GetMember("sample")[0], Expression.Constant(10))
        }
    );

    // The following statement first creates an expression tree,
    // then compiles it, and then runs it.
    var test = Expression.Lambda<Func<TestMemberInitClass>>(testExpr).Compile()();
    Console.WriteLine(test.sample);
}

// This code example produces the following output:
//
// 10
' Add the following directive to your file:
' Imports System.Linq.Expressions  

Class TestMemberInitClass
    Public Property Sample As Integer
End Class

Sub MemberInit()
    ' This expression creates a new TestMemberInitClass object
    ' and assigns 10 to its Sample property.
    Dim testExpr As Expression = Expression.MemberInit(
        Expression.[New](GetType(TestMemberInitClass)),
        New List(Of MemberBinding)() From {
            Expression.Bind(GetType(TestMemberInitClass).GetMember("Sample")(0), Expression.Constant(10))
        }
    )

    ' The following statement first creates an expression tree,
    ' then compiles it, and then runs it.
    Dim test = Expression.Lambda(Of Func(Of TestMemberInitClass))(testExpr).Compile()()
    Console.WriteLine(test.Sample)
End Sub

' This code example produces the following output:
'
' 10

Remarks

The Type property of the resulting MemberInitExpression is equal to the Type property of newExpression.

Applies to

MemberInit(NewExpression, MemberBinding[])

Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs
Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs
Source:
MemberInitExpression.cs
public:
 static System::Linq::Expressions::MemberInitExpression ^ MemberInit(System::Linq::Expressions::NewExpression ^ newExpression, ... cli::array <System::Linq::Expressions::MemberBinding ^> ^ bindings);
public static System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression MemberInit (System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression newExpression, params System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding[] bindings);
static member MemberInit : System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression * System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding[] -> System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression
Public Shared Function MemberInit (newExpression As NewExpression, ParamArray bindings As MemberBinding()) As MemberInitExpression

Parameters

newExpression
NewExpression

A NewExpression to set the NewExpression property equal to.

bindings
MemberBinding[]

An array of MemberBinding objects to use to populate the Bindings collection.

Returns

A MemberInitExpression that has the NodeType property equal to MemberInit and the NewExpression and Bindings properties set to the specified values.

Exceptions

newExpression or bindings is null.

The Member property of an element of bindings does not represent a member of the type that newExpression.Type represents.

Examples

The following example demonstrates how to use the MemberInit(NewExpression, MemberBinding[]) method to create a MemberInitExpression that represents the initialization of two members of a new object.

class Animal
{
    public string Species {get; set;}
    public int Age {get; set;}
}

public static void CreateMemberInitExpression()
{
    System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression newAnimal =
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.New(typeof(Animal));

    System.Reflection.MemberInfo speciesMember =
        typeof(Animal).GetMember("Species")[0];
    System.Reflection.MemberInfo ageMember =
        typeof(Animal).GetMember("Age")[0];

    // Create a MemberBinding object for each member
    // that you want to initialize.
    System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding speciesMemberBinding =
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Bind(
            speciesMember,
            System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant("horse"));
    System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding ageMemberBinding =
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Bind(
            ageMember,
            System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(12));

    // Create a MemberInitExpression that represents initializing
    // two members of the 'Animal' class.
    System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression memberInitExpression =
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.MemberInit(
            newAnimal,
            speciesMemberBinding,
            ageMemberBinding);

    Console.WriteLine(memberInitExpression.ToString());

    // This code produces the following output:
    //
    // new Animal() {Species = "horse", Age = 12}
}
Class Animal
    Public Species As String
    Public Age As Integer
End Class

Shared Sub CreateMemberInitExpression()
    Dim newAnimal As System.Linq.Expressions.NewExpression = _
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.[New](Type.GetType("ExpressionVB.MemberInitExample+Animal"))

    Dim speciesMember As System.Reflection.MemberInfo = _
        Type.GetType("ExpressionVB.MemberInitExample+Animal").GetMember("Species")(0)
    Dim ageMember As System.Reflection.MemberInfo = _
        Type.GetType("ExpressionVB.MemberInitExample+Animal").GetMember("Age")(0)

    ' Create a MemberBinding object for each member
    ' that you want to initialize.
    Dim speciesMemberBinding As System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding = _
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Bind( _
            speciesMember, _
            System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant("horse"))
    Dim ageMemberBinding As System.Linq.Expressions.MemberBinding = _
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Bind( _
            ageMember, _
            System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.Constant(12))

    ' Create a MemberInitExpression that represents initializing
    ' two members of the 'Animal' class.
    Dim memberInitExpression As System.Linq.Expressions.MemberInitExpression = _
        System.Linq.Expressions.Expression.MemberInit( _
            newAnimal, _
            speciesMemberBinding, _
            ageMemberBinding)

    Console.WriteLine(memberInitExpression.ToString())

    ' This code produces the following output:
    '
    ' new Animal() {Species = "horse", Age = 12}
End Sub

Remarks

The Type property of the resulting MemberInitExpression is equal to the Type property of newExpression.

Applies to