.NET Development Foundation/Using collections
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System types and collections: Using collections
Using Collections
[edit | edit source]Exam objective: Manage a group of associated data in a .NET Framework application by using collections.
(Refer System.Collections namespace - MSDN)
ArrayList class
[edit | edit source]see MSDN
The ArrayList class is used for arrays whose size will dynamically increase as required. An ArrayList is not necessarily sorted.
using System; using System.Collections;
public class Demo { public static void Main() { ArrayList myArrayList = new ArrayList(); myArrayList.Add("Testing"); myArrayList.Add("1...2...3"); } }
Collection interfaces
[edit | edit source]- ICollection interface and IList interface
- ICollection interface - MSDN
- The ICollection interface is the base interface for classes in the System.Collections namespace.
- The ICollection interface extends IEnumerable; IDictionary and IList are more specialized interfaces that extend ICollection. An IDictionary implementation is a collection of key/value pairs, like the Hashtable class. An IList implementation is a collection of values and its members can be accessed by index, like the ArrayList class.
- Some collections that limit access to their elements, such as the Queue class and the Stack class, directly implement the ICollection interface.
- If neither the IDictionary interface nor the IList interface meet the requirements of the required collection, derive the new collection class from the ICollection interface instead for more flexibility.
- The following tables list the members exposed by the ICollection type.
- Public Properties
Count - Gets the number of elements contained in the ICollection. IsSynchronized - Gets a value indicating whether access to the ICollection is synchronized (thread safe). SyncRoot - Gets an object that can be used to synchronize access to the ICollection.
- Public Methods
CopyTo - Copies the elements of the ICollection to an Array, starting at a particular Array index.
- IList interface - MSDN
- IComparer interface, IEqualityComparer interface, and IKeyComparer interface
- IComparer interface - MSDN
- IEqualityComparer interface - MSDN
- IKeyComparer interface - IKeyComparer does not exist in .Net 2.0
- IDictionary interface and IDictionaryEnumerator interface
- IDictionary interface - MSDN
- IDictionaryEnumerator interface - MSDN
C# code sample
IEnumerator sample
public class Person { public Person(string fName, string lName) { this.firstName = fName; this.lastName = lName; } public string firstName; public string lastName; }
public class PeopleEnum : IEnumerator { public Person[] _people; //Enumerators are positioned before the first element //until the first MoveNext() call. int position = -1; public PeopleEnum(Person[] list) { _people = list; } public bool MoveNext() { position++; return (position < _people.Length); } public void Reset() { position = -1; } public object Current { get { try { return _people[position]; } catch (IndexOutOfRangeException) { throw new InvalidOperationException(); } } } }
public class People : IEnumerable { private Person[] _people; public People(Person[] pArray) { _people = new Person[pArray.Length]; for (int i = 0; i < pArray.Length; i++) { _people[i] = pArray[i]; } } public IEnumerator GetEnumerator() { return new PeopleEnum(_people); } }
Write down a handler for Practicing the above code.
protected void lnkEnumerator_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { Person[] peopleArray = new Person[] { new Person("Irfan", "Akhtar"), new Person("Hammad", "Anwar"), new Person("Majid", "Aalim") }; PeopleEnum Prson = new PeopleEnum(peopleArray);
- One way of using IEnumerator.
while (Prson.MoveNext () ) { Person P = (Person)Prson.Current; Response.Write("First Name : " + P.firstName + ", Last Name : " + P.lastName); }
- One way of using IEnumerable.
People peopleList = new People(peopleArray); foreach (Person p in peopleList) Response.Write("First Name : " + p.firstName + ", Last Name : " + p.lastName);
- IHashCodeProvider interface - MSDN - Interface is now obsolete (as of .NET 2.0)
Iterators
[edit | edit source]See MSDN
- An iterator is effectively a lightweight version of the IEnumerable interface. It is primarily used with foreach statements.
- You will normally implement the GetEnumerator method of the IEnumerable interface.
public class Colors : System.Collections.IEnumerable { string[] colors = { "Red", "Green", "Blue" };
public System.Collections.IEnumerator GetEnumerator() { for (int i = 0; i < colors.Length; i++) { yield return colors[i]; } } }
- This enables the class to be accessed using a standard foreach statement. A class is not restricted to implementing only a single iterator. Multiple iterators can be supplied, for example to enable iteration in both ascending and descending order of a list. To call a named iterator, use the following syntax:
foreach (int i in myList.NamedIterator()) { System.Console.WriteLine(i); }
- The yield statement marks a point where execution of a iterator will resume on a subsequent iteration. This can be used to supply multiple yield statements:
public System.Collections.IEnumerator GetEnumerator() { yield return "Statement returned on iteration 1"; yield return "Statement returned on iteration 2"; }
- To end the iteration programmatically, use the
yield break;
- statement.
Hashtable class - MSDN
- Used to represent a collection of key/value pairs.
CollectionBase class and ReadOnlyCollectionBase class
- CollectionBase class - MSDN
- ReadOnlyCollectionBase class -MSDN
DictionaryBase class and DictionaryEntry class
- DictionaryBase class - MSDN
- DictionaryEntry structure - MSDN
Comparer class - MSDN
Queue class - MSDN
SortedList class - MSDN
BitArray class - MSDN
Stack class - MSDN
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