GlobalStrings.AddRange(localStrings);
Note: You cannot declare the list object using the interface (IList).
Documentation: List<T>.AddRange(IEnumerable<T>)
.
More Related Contents:
- auto click in C# in difrent position of screen [closed]
- Start a .Net Process as a Different User
- How to convert a String to its equivalent LINQ Expression Tree?
- Should I use public properties and private fields or public fields for data?
- calculating the difference in months between two dates
- Why there are 5 Versions of Timer Classes in .NET?
- How to do a subquery in LINQ?
- Does C# have an equivalent to JavaScript’s encodeURIComponent()?
- Read Post Data submitted to ASP.Net Form
- Troubleshooting BadImageFormatException
- Using FFmpeg in .net?
- Add client certificate to .NET Core HttpClient
- Generic List – moving an item within the list
- Implementing the Producer/Consumer Pattern in C#
- How to Start a Process Unelevated
- C#, FindControl [duplicate]
- Restrict route to controller namespace in ASP.NET Core
- DataGridTextColumn Visibility Binding
- Type must be a reference Type Error When Calling Generic Method
- How do I set `OutputPath` in a Visual Studio 2017 project (new .csproj file format) without the target framework cluttering the resolved path?
- Warm-up when calling methods in C#
- How do you pass a BitmapImage from a background thread to the UI thread in WPF?
- Keep Getting ‘The LINQ expression node type ‘Invoke’ is not supported in LINQ to Entities’ Exception
- How to change the port number for Asp.Net core app?
- Convert DateTime to long and also the other way around
- Converting a byte array to PNG/JPG [closed]
- OData with ServiceStack? [closed]
- How to deserialize object derived from Exception class using Json.net?
- C# moving the mouse around realistically
- Resharper: vars