I\'m reading the book \'C# in Depth, 2nd Edition\' of Jon Skeet. He said that we can call extension methods with dynamic arguments using two workarounds, just as
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Like this:
dynamic numbers = Enumerable.Range(10, 10);
var firstFive = Enumerable.Take(numbers, 5);
In other words, just call it as a static method instead of as an extension method.
Or if you know an appropriate type argument you could just cast it, which I'd typically do with an extra variable:
dynamic numbers = Enumerable.Range(10, 10);
var sequence = (IEnumerable<int>) numbers;
var firstFive = sequence.Take(5);
... but if you're dealing with dynamic types, you may well not know the sequence element type, in which case the first version lets the "execution time compiler" figure it out, basically.
Extension method just a syntactic sugar, it will be converted as a normal method calling by c# compiler. This conversion is dependent with current syntax context (Which namespaces are imported by using statement).
Dynamic variable is process by runtime. this time, CLR cannot get enough syntax context information to deciding which extension method used. So, it is not work.