This is C# 4.0.
I have a class that stores WeakReferences on some Actions like that:
public class LoremIpsum
{
private Dictionary<Type, List<WeakReference>> references = new Dictionary<Type, List<WeakReference>>();
public void KeepReference<T>(Action<T> action)
{
if (this.references.ContainsKey(typeof(T)))
{
this.references[typeof(T)].Add(new WeakReference(action));
}
else
{
this.references.Add(typeof(T), new List<WeakReference> { new WeakReference(action) });
}
}
}
This class has another method allowing to execute the Actions passed to it later but it's of little importance in this question.
and I consume this class this way:
public class Foobar
{
public Bar Bar { get; set; }
public void Foo(LoremIpsum ipsum)
{
ipsum.KeepReference<Bar>((b) => { this.Bar = b; });
ipsum.KeepReference<Bar>(this.Whatever);
}
public void Whatever(Bar bar)
{
// Do anything, for example...:
this.Bar = bar
}
}
Bar being a third class in my application.
My question:
In the KeepReference method, how can I know if the Action passed in parameter refers to an anonymous method (this.Bar = b;) or a concrete method (this.Whatever)?
I checked the properties of action. I couldn't find any property on action (like IsAbstract) of a IsAnonymous kind. The underlying type is MethodInfo which makes sense because after compiling I can see in ildasm the anonymous method "became" a normal method on Foobar. In ildasm I can also see that the anonymous method is not a full pink square but a white square surrounded by pink and in its definition there's a call to some CompilerServices classes but I don't know how to take advantage of this back in C#. I'm sure it's possible to get to know about the real nature of action. What am I missing?

CompilerGeneratedAttributeon the method, than the intricacies of the compiler's anonymous method naming scheme. – Michael Kjörling Oct 6 '12 at 9:34