Generics are classes and methods that have placeholders (type parameters or parameterized types) for one or more types. This lets you design classes that take in a generic type and determine the actual type at run time. A common use for generic classes is to work with collections. For information about generic methods, see Call .NET Generic Methods.
The NET.createGeneric
function
creates an instance of the specialized generic class given the following:
Fully qualified name of the generic class definition
List of fully qualified parameter type names for generic type specialization
Variable list of constructor arguments
Use instances of the NET.GenericClass
helper class in NET.createGeneric
function’s
parameter type list when specialization requires another parameterized
class definition. The class instances serve as parameterized data
type definitions and are constructed using fully qualified generic
type name and a variable length list of fully qualified type names
for generic type specialization. This list can also contain instances
of NET.GenericClass
if an extra nested level of
parameterization is required.