here is the object code:
public class DlpItem : IEqualityComparer<DlpItem>
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public int Id { get; set; }
public DlpItem(int pId)
{
Text = string.Empty;
Id = pId;
}
public override bo开发者_JAVA百科ol Equals(object obj)
{
return Id == (obj as DlpItem).Id;
}
public bool Equals(DlpItem a, DlpItem b)
{
return a.Id == b.Id;
}
public int GetHashCode(DlpItem item)
{
return Id.GetHashCode();
}
}
And I have two lists as follows:
var list1 = new List<DlpItem>();
list1.Add(new DlpItem(1));
list1.Add(new DlpItem(2));
var list2 = new List<DlpItem>();
list2.Add(new DlpItem(1));
list2.Add(new DlpItem(2));
var delItems = list1.Except(list2).ToList<DlpItem>();
delItems always has both items in it. What am I missing here?
EDIT: Code now implements IEquatable
public class DlpItem : IEqualityComparer<DlpItem>, IEquatable<DlpItem>
{
public string Text { get; set; }
public int Id { get; set; }
public override bool Equals(object obj)
{
return Id - (obj as DlpItem).Id == 0;
}
public bool Equals(DlpItem a, DlpItem b)
{
return a.Id == b.Id;
}
public bool Equals(DlpItem item)
{
return item != null && Id == item.Id;
}
public int GetHashCode(DlpItem item)
{
return Id.GetHashCode();
}
}
In your example, you don't actually add anything to list2
... a simple enough mistake, but there is a more significant issue:
It needs to be IEquatable<T>
not an IEqualityComparer<T>
; also, you might want to ensure the hashcode can't change; most simply by making Id
read-only:
public class DlpItem : IEquatable<DlpItem>
{
public string Text { get; set; }
private readonly int id;
public int Id { get { return id; } }
public DlpItem(int id)
{
Text = "";
this.id = id;
}
public override bool Equals(object obj)
{
return Equals(obj as DlpItem);
}
public bool Equals(DlpItem other)
{
return other != null && this.Id == other.Id;
}
public override int GetHashCode()
{
return Id.GetHashCode();
}
}
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