Yes, the out
keyword:
public void ReturnManyInts(out int int1, out int int2, out int int3)
{
int1 = 10;
int2 = 20;
int3 = 30;
}
then call it like this:
int i1, i2, i3;
ReturnManyInts(out i1, out i2, out i3);
Console.WriteLine(i1);
Console.WriteLine(i2);
Console.WriteLine(i3);
which outputs:
10
20
30
EDIT:
I'm seeing that a lot of posts are suggesting to create your own class for this. This is not necessary as .net provides you with a class to do what they are saying already. The Tuple
class.
public Tuple<int, string, char> ReturnMany()
{
return new Tuple<int, string, char>(1, "some string", 'B');
}
then you can retrieve it like so:
var myTuple = ReturnMany();
myTuple.Item1 ...
myTuple.Item2 ...
there are generic overloads so you can have up to 8 unique types in your tuple.
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