Hi, Victor.
>This is the Scenario
>
>I am creating an instance of a object derivated from a special collection in that way:
RegionCollection myregioncollection = new RegionCollection().Load();
>
>Then I am saving the object into a session to allow other web pages recover the object and then perform some actions.
>
Session[“mycollection”]= myregioncollection;
>
>NOW I am in other web form and I NEED to recover the object saved in session like this;
>
? Mylocalcollection;
>Mylocalcollection = Session[“mycollection”];
>
>?= the type I don’t know.
>
>BUT, I need first to declare the type of Mylocalcollection which is unknown, since I can have several types of object saved into the session (each table of my system represents a type). If I don’t know the type I can not initialize my local object.
>
>How can I solve this situation with generics or whatever.
Well, the question is: what's the type of the objects you are loading into RegionCollection? If they are all from different types, then you have a design problem, most probably. Can you provide more details about what's the purpose of this collection?
>Note: This is solved in C# with the type VAR, but for now I am in C# 2
Not at all. var only lets the compiler infer the type from the right side of the expression, but you still have to know what it is to be able to use it.
Regards,