EDIT: I thought this was part of ECMA 335, but I can't see it in there anywhere.
You can't create such a delegate type in C#, but you can in IL:
.class public auto ansi sealed Foo
extends [mscorlib]System.Delegate
{
// Body as normal
}
The C# compiler has no problems using such a delegate:
using System;
class Test
{
static void Main()
{
Foo f = x => Console.WriteLine(x);
f("hello");
}
}
But the CLR does when it tries to load it:
Unhandled Exception: System.TypeLoadException: Could not load type 'Foo' from assembly 'Foo, Version=0.0.0.0, Culture=neutral, PublicKeyToken=null' because it cannot inherit directly from the delegate class.
at Test.Main()
Basically the Delegate/MulticastDelegate separation is an historical accident. I believe that early alpha/beta versions did make the distinction, but it proved too confusing and generally not useful - so now every delegate derives from MulticastDelegate.
(Interestingly, the C# specification only mentions MulticastDelegate once, in the list of types which can't be used as generic constraints.)
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