F# delegates is a reference type variable that holds the reference to a method. The reference can be changed at runtime. F# delegates are similar to pointers to functions, in C or C++.
Declaring F# Delegates
Delegate declaration determines the methods that can be referenced by the delegate. A delegate can refer to a method, which has the same signature as that of the delegate.
The syntax for delegate declaration is −
type delegate-typename = delegate of type1 -> type2
For example, consider the delegates −
// Delegate1 works with tuple arguments. type Delegate1 = delegate of (int * int) -> int // Delegate2 works with curried arguments. type Delegate2 = delegate of int * int -> int
Both the delegates can be used to reference any method that has two int parameters and returns an int type variable.
In the syntax −
- type1 represents the argument type(s).
- type2 represents the return type.
Please note −
- The argument types are automatically curried.
- Delegates can be attached to function values, and static or instance methods.
- F# function values can be passed directly as arguments to delegate constructors.
- For a static method the delegate is called by using the name of the class and the method. For an instance method, the name of the object instance and method is used.
- The Invoke method on the delegate type calls the encapsulated function.
- Also, delegates can be passed as function values by referencing the Invoke method name without the parentheses.
The following example demonstrates the concept −
Example
type Myclass() = static member add(a : int, b : int) = a + b static member sub (a : int) (b : int) = a - b member x.Add(a : int, b : int) = a + b member x.Sub(a : int) (b : int) = a - b // Delegate1 works with tuple arguments. type Delegate1 = delegate of (int * int) -> int // Delegate2 works with curried arguments. type Delegate2 = delegate of int * int -> int let InvokeDelegate1 (dlg : Delegate1) (a : int) (b: int) = dlg.Invoke(a, b) let InvokeDelegate2 (dlg : Delegate2) (a : int) (b: int) = dlg.Invoke(a, b) // For static methods, use the class name, the dot operator, and the // name of the static method. let del1 : Delegate1 = new Delegate1( Myclass.add ) let del2 : Delegate2 = new Delegate2( Myclass.sub ) let mc = Myclass() // For instance methods, use the instance value name, the dot operator, // and the instance method name. let del3 : Delegate1 = new Delegate1( mc.Add ) let del4 : Delegate2 = new Delegate2( mc.Sub ) for (a, b) in [ (400, 200); (100, 45) ] do printfn "%d + %d = %d" a b (InvokeDelegate1 del1 a b) printfn "%d - %d = %d" a b (InvokeDelegate2 del2 a b) printfn "%d + %d = %d" a b (InvokeDelegate1 del3 a b) printfn "%d - %d = %d" a b (InvokeDelegate2 del4 a b)
When you compile and execute the program, it yields the following output −
400 + 200 = 600 400 - 200 = 200 400 + 200 = 600 400 - 200 = 200 100 + 45 = 145 100 - 45 = 55 100 + 45 = 145 100 - 45 = 55
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