I failed to convert List<string>
to List<myEnumType>
. I don't know why?
string Val = it.Current.Value.ToString(); // works well here
List<myEnumType> ValList = new List<myEnumType>开发者_如何学Go;(Val.Split(',')); // compile failed
Of cause myEnumType
type defined as string enum type as this,
public enum myEnumType
{
strVal_1,
strVal_2,
strVal_3,
}
Is there anything wrong? Appreciated for you replies.
EDIT: Oops, I missed the C# 2 tag as well. I'll leave the other options available below, but:
In C# 2, you're probably best using List<T>.ConvertAll
:
List<MyEnumType> enumList = stringList.ConvertAll(delegate(string x) {
return (MyEnumType) Enum.Parse(typeof(MyEnumType), x); });
or with Unconstrained Melody:
List<MyEnumType> enumList = stringList.ConvertAll(delegate(string x) {
return Enums.ParseName<MyEnumType>(x); });
Note that this does assume you really have a List<string>
to start with, which is correct for your title but not for the body in your question. Fortunately there's an equivalent static Array.ConvertAll
method which you'd have to use like this:
MyEnumType[] enumArray = Array.ConvertAll(stringArray, delegate (string x) {
return (MyEnumType) Enum.Parse(typeof(MyEnumType), x); });
Original answer
Two options:
Use Enum.Parse and a cast in a LINQ query:
var enumList = stringList .Select(x => (MyEnumType) Enum.Parse(typeof(MyEnumType), x)) .ToList();
or
var enumList = stringList.Select(x => Enum.Parse(typeof(MyEnumType), x))
.Cast<MyEnumType>()
.ToList();
Use my Unconstrained Melody project:
var enumList = stringList.Select(x => Enums.ParseName<MyEnumType>(x)) .ToList();
In C# 2.0:
List<myEnumType> ValList = new List<myEnumType>();
foreach (string x in Val.Split(','))
ValList.Add((MyEnumType) Enum.Parse(typeof(MyEnumType), x));
List<String> list = new List<String>();
list.Add("strVal_1");
list.Add("strVal_2");
list.Add("strVal_3");
List<myEnumType> enumList = new List<myEnumType>();
foreach (var item in list)
{
enumList.Add((myEnumType)Enum.Parse(typeof(myEnumType), item));
}
Create an extension method and with Select
do the Work:
public static class ExtensionClass
{
public static myEnumType GetEnumValue(this string input)
{
if (input == myEnumType.strVal_1.ToString())
return myEnumType.strVal_1;
return input == myEnumType.strVal_2.ToString() ? myEnumType.strVal_2 : myEnumType.strVal_3;
}
}
List<myEnumType> ValList = new List<myEnumType>(Val.Split(',').Select(p=>p.GetEnumValue()));
I missed c#2.0 tag :)
I added an extension method to IEnumerable<string>
to do this for me. Skeet's answer is good, obviously, but it will throw an exception if the strings aren't valid for the enum (which you may or may not want), and it's a pretty ugly looking line.
public static class StringEnumerableExtensions {
public static IEnumerable<T> StringsToEnums<T>( this IEnumerable<string> strs) where T : struct, IConvertible {
Type t = typeof( T );
var ret = new List<T>();
if( t.IsEnum ) {
T outStr;
foreach( var str in strs ) {
if( Enum.TryParse( str, out outStr ) ) {
ret.Add( outStr );
}
}
}
return ret;
}
}
Given this enum:
public enum ColorEnum { Blue, Yellow }
You can use this like so:
var colors = new List<string>() {"Blue","Yellow","Black"};
var colorEnums = colors.StringsToEnums<ColorEnum>();
And you'll get a list with just Blue
and Yellow
.
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