I would like to know how to use a System.Collections.Hashtable
开发者_Go百科 in F#. The reason it is a Hashtable is because I am referencing C# assemblies.
How would I call the following methods? - Add - Get value from key
I have not been able to find anything useful in Google about this.
As Mark points out, you can work with the Hashtable
type directly from F# (just like with any other .NET type). The syntax for accessing indexers in F# is slightly different though:
open System.Collections
// 'new' is optional, but I would use it here
let ht = new Hashtable()
// Adding element can be done using the C#-like syntax
ht.Add(1, "One")
// To call the indexer, you would use similar syntax as in C#
// with the exception that there needst to be a '.' (dot)
let sObj = ht.[1]
Since Hashtable is not generic, you would probably want to cast the object back to string. To do that, you can either use the :?>
downcast operator, or you can use the unbox
keyword and provide a type annotation to specify what type do you want to get as the result:
let s = (sObj :?> string)
let (s:string) = unbox sObj
If you have any control over what type is used, then I would recommend using Dictionary<int, string>
instead of Hashtable
. This is fully compatible with C# and you would avoid the need to do casting. If you're returning this as a result from F#, you could also use standard F# map
and just upcast it to IDictionary<_,_>
before passing it to C#:
let map = Map.empty |> Map.add 1 "one"
let res = map :> IDictionary<_, _>
This way, C# users will see a familiar type, but you can write the code in the usual functional style.
It's pretty straightforward to do.
open System.Collections //using System.Collections
let ht = Hashtable() // var ht = new Hashtable()
ht.Add(1, "One")
let getValue = ht.Item[1] // var getValue = ht[1];
//NB: All indexer properties are named "Item" in F#.
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