I have a List<MyObj>
with the class MyObj : IComparable
. I wrote the method CompareTo
in the MyObj
class per the IComparable
interface, but when I use the List<MyObj>.Contains(myObjInstance)
it returns false
when it should be true
.
I'm not sure I'm understanding how I need to proceed to make sure the List
uses my custom comparison method when calling then Contains
function.
Here is my compareTo implementation:
#region IComparable Members
public int CompareTo(object obj)
{
MyObj myObj = (MyObj)obj;
return String.Compare(this.Symbol, myObj.Symbol, true);
}
#endregion
Note the Symbol property is a string.
To clarify I've put a stopping point in that compareTo method and it doesn't even go in there.
Anyone has ever tried that?
Thanks.
The absolute easiest way to find out whether your CompareTo method is called is to set a breakpoint in it and hit F5 to run your program. But I believe that List<T>.Contains
looks for the IEquatable<T>
interface for making the comparison.
According to the documentation for List<T>.Contains
, it uses either your implementation of IEquatable
interface or object.Equals
, that you can override as well.
Did you try overriding the Equals method?
List<T>
, according to reflector, uses EqualityComparer<T>
to check for containment, and the default implementation (ObjectEqualityComparer) uses Equals for most normal objects.
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