I am confused by the syntax for removing event handlers in C#.
Something += new MyHandler(HandleSomething); // add
Something -= new MyHandler(HandleSomething
You can think of events as placeholder methods for the delegated logic that executes when the event is raised. A single event can have multiple subscribers (multi-casting), so the += and -= syntax is how a single event handler is attached or removed. Simply doing assignment would reset the event's subscriptions, which could cause unwanted side-effects.
EDIT: this link explains more about eventing in C#
The "new MyHandler" is actually redundant. You can simply do
Something += HandleSomething; // add
Something -= HandleSomething; // remove
All events in C# are multicast delegates, so the += and -= syntax indicates that you are adding/removing a delegate to the list of delegates that will be called.
As for what's going on behind the scenes, the best explanation that I've found is Jon Skeet's.
The += and the -= are syntax shortcuts for built-in internal methods named Add(), and Remove(), which add or remove a pointer to an internal linked list of delegates that the delegate has as a private field. When you run Remove, it starts at the head of the linked list and examines each delegate in the list one at a time until it finds one that is "equal" to the one you passed to the Remove() method. ( using -= syntax)
Then, it removes that one from the linked list, and patches the linked list to retain it's connectivity...
In this context, the 'equals' method (for a delegate()) is overridden so that it only compares the target of the delegate, and the methodPtr, which will be the same even though you have created a new delegate to pass to Remove...