Skip to content

Latest commit

 

History

History
55 lines (34 loc) · 3.08 KB

File metadata and controls

55 lines (34 loc) · 3.08 KB
title description ms.date helpviewer_keywords ms.assetid
Events
Learn about events. Events enable a class or object to notify other classes or objects when something of interest occurs.
07/20/2015
classes [C#], events
C# language, events
events [C#]
a8e51b22-d294-44fb-9539-0072f06c4cb3

Events (C# Programming Guide)

Events enable a class or object to notify other classes or objects when something of interest occurs. The class that sends (or raises) the event is called the publisher and the classes that receive (or handle) the event are called subscribers.

In a typical C# Windows Forms or Web application, you subscribe to events raised by controls such as buttons and list boxes. You can use the Visual C# integrated development environment (IDE) to browse the events that a control publishes and select the ones that you want to handle. The IDE provides an easy way to automatically add an empty event handler method and the code to subscribe to the event. For more information, see How to subscribe to and unsubscribe from events.

Events Overview

Events have the following properties:

  • The publisher determines when an event is raised; the subscribers determine what action is taken in response to the event.

  • An event can have multiple subscribers. A subscriber can handle multiple events from multiple publishers.

  • Events that have no subscribers are never raised.

  • Events are typically used to signal user actions such as button clicks or menu selections in graphical user interfaces.

  • When an event has multiple subscribers, the event handlers are invoked synchronously when an event is raised. To invoke events asynchronously, see Calling Synchronous Methods Asynchronously.

  • In the .NET class library, events are based on the xref:System.EventHandler delegate and the xref:System.EventArgs base class.

Related Sections

For more information, see:

C# Language Specification

For more information, see Events in the C# Language Specification. The language specification is the definitive source for C# syntax and usage.

See also