I am attempting following code to create multiple instances of a class at run-time and want to initialize also, but it is giving error:
A local variable named 'inum' cannot be declared in this scope because it would give a different meaning to '开发者_如何学编程inum', which is already used in a 'parent or current' scope to denote something else.
public class MyClass
{
static int i=0;
class A
{
public A()
{
}
}
public static void Run()
{
string inum = "i";
for (int j=1;j<=5;j++)
{
inum = inum + j.ToString();
//Initialize Instance
A inum = new A();
}
}
}
You appear to be trying to use variable names "dynamically". That doesn't work in C#, and you should change how you think about variables. If you want to create several instances, declare an array:
public class MyClass
{
static A[] instances;
class A
{
public A()
{
}
}
public static void Run()
{
instances = new A[5];
for (int j=0;j<5;j++)
{
instances[j] = new A();
}
}
}
You cannot have dynamic variable in c#. The append you are trying is appending the value not the variable pointer.
rather use this way
Dictionary<int, A> inum = new Dictionary<int, A>();
for (int j=1;j<=5;j++)
{
//Initialize Instance and add to dictionary
inum.Add(j, new A());
}
You can get them by key name. There are several other way to store instances as collection
I'm not a C# programmer by any stretch of the imagination, but by the rules of Java and any other similarly syntaxed language I know anything about, what you are doing is attempting to redeclare 'inum' with a new type, after it has been declared as a string in the same scope.
The other point is that even if this were not the case, you are not creating multiple instances but filling the same variable with a new instance 5 times, which would only result in one instance (the last one).
From quickly reading a C# tutorial I think this is something like what you want. I'm not sure what you were trying to do with the 'inum' variable so it is gone, as is static variable 'i':
public class MyClass
{
class A
{
public A()
{
}
}
public static void Run()
{
// Declare array to hold instances
A[] instances;
// instances is now five elements long
instances = new A[5];
for (int j=0;j<5;j++)
{
//Initialize Instance
instances[j] = new A();
}
}
}
That should result in an array of 5 objects called 'instances' in the scope of the Run method - you may want this in the scope of the class itself, possibly as a static property.
As a side note, it's good practice to start at 0, not 1, for operations like this (with the var 'j') and the above code reflects this.
you cannot call the variable of type A "inum" (there exists already one called like that)
you have to give it another name like:
A anyOtherName = new A();
try to name the variable A
with different name
A objA = new A();
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