|
ArrayExtensionsCombineT(T, T, T, T) Method
|
Combines arrays together into a single array.
Namespace: GSFAssembly: GSF.Core (in GSF.Core.dll) Version: 2.4.207-beta+1781b796b2aa7a54013a031eb432fe4ccee31867
Syntax public static T[] Combine<T>(
this T[] source,
T[] other1,
T[] other2,
T[] other3
)
<ExtensionAttribute>
Public Shared Function Combine(Of T) (
source As T(),
other1 As T(),
other2 As T(),
other3 As T()
) As T()
public:
[ExtensionAttribute]
generic<typename T>
static array<T>^ Combine(
array<T>^ source,
array<T>^ other1,
array<T>^ other2,
array<T>^ other3
)
[<ExtensionAttribute>]
static member Combine :
source : 'T[] *
other1 : 'T[] *
other2 : 'T[] *
other3 : 'T[] -> 'T[]
JavaScript does not support generic types or methods.
View SourceParameters
- source T
- Source array.
- other1 T
- First array to combine to source array.
- other2 T
- Second array to combine to source array.
- other3 T
- Third array to combine to source array.
Type Parameters
- T
Return Value
TCombined arrays.
Usage Note
In Visual Basic and C#, you can call this method as an instance method on any object of type
T. When you use instance method syntax to call this method, omit the first parameter. For more information, see
Extension Methods (Visual Basic) or
Extension Methods (C# Programming Guide).
Remarks
Only use this function if you need a copy of the combined arrays, it will be optimal
to use the Linq function ConcatTSource(IEnumerableTSource, IEnumerableTSource) if you simply need to
iterate over the combined arrays.
This function can easily throw an out of memory exception if there is not enough
contiguous memory to create an array sized with the combined lengths.
See Also