3

Trying to write a piece of code to compare two strings. If either are equal to the textbox then it opens a new winform. I know how to do the winform part.

string CreditCard1 = "Some numbers";

        string CreditCard2 = "Some Numbers";
        string RFIDCard1 = "E00700000330E44C";
        string RFIDCard2 = "E00700000338E539";

        if(CardScan_txtBx = CreditCard1 || RFIDCard1)`

I get an error from MSVS 2010 saying:

Operator '||' cannot be applied to operands of type 'string' and 'string'

Is there a way to do what I want?

1
  • Thank you all for the great answers.
    – ajaustin12
    Mar 4, 2012 at 4:49

9 Answers 9

6

This line is the culprit:

  if(CardScan_txtBx = CreditCard1 || RFIDCard1)`

Try:

  if(CardScan_txtBx.Text == CreditCard1 || CardScan_txtBx.Text == RFIDCard1)

On a side note, it scares me that you're apparently working with credit card information, but don't know how to compare values in a text box. I really, really hope, for the sake of your customers, that you plan on investigating how to securely manage that information.

3
  • @jordan I am not working with real credit cards. This is a project to simulate the experience.
    – ajaustin12
    Mar 4, 2012 at 4:48
  • @ajaustin12: glad the answer helped. If you're interested in ecommerce and how to securely handle credit card info, you could check out the following questions here on SO: stackoverflow.com/questions/tagged/…
    – Jordan
    Mar 4, 2012 at 5:04
  • @Jordan Thank you for the link and your answer. I got my program to work with your answer.
    – ajaustin12
    Mar 4, 2012 at 12:59
4

There are three problems here:

  1. You cannot compare against multiple values using an OR (||). This is a surprisingly common misconception, but makes no sense to the compiler.
  2. Comparison in C# is done with ==. = is for assignment.
  3. A TextBox is not a string; you need to use its Text property to get or set the text it contains.

So in the end, your if statement should look like this:

if(CardScan_txtBx.Text == CreditCard1 || CardScan_txtBx.Text == RFIDCard1) {
    // ...
}
1

Ok you have 2 issues here, firstly single equals is assignment not comparison and secondly each argument separated by an or needs to be a bool, ie should be

   if(CardScan_txtBx == CreditCard1 ||CardScan_txtBx == RFIDCard1)
1

Could you use else if?

if(CardScan_txtBx == CreditCard1)
{
//Do something
} else if(CardScan_txtBx == RFIDCard1)
{ 
//Do something 
}
1

The other answers have the correct code, here is an explanation of the why. When you use the || operator, it is expecting an expression on either side to be something that evaluates to a bool (true or false). When you wrote CardScan_txtBx.Text == CreditCard1 || RFIDCard1 you have an statement that evaluates to a bool on the left, CardScan_txtBx.Text == CreditCard1 and you have a statement that evaluates to string on right RFIDCard1 Because a string is not a bool, you get the compile time error. that is why you must repeat the == operator on the right hand side so that you say CardScan_txtBx.Text == RFIDCard1

1

Try out with following code.....

if (CardScan_txtBx.Equals(CreditCard1) || CardScan_txtBx.Equals(RFIDCard1))
{ 
      //Code
}
1

Try this:

if (CardScan_txtBx.Text == CreditCard1 || CardScan_txtBx.Text == RFIDCard1)
1

See here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/53k8ybth%28v=vs.71%29.aspx

Not: =

Right: expr1 == expr2

1
  • Thanks small mistake getting tired.
    – ajaustin12
    Mar 4, 2012 at 4:44
0

You can also use a List.

List<string> listOfValidStrings = new List<string>();
 //Initialise all valid strings.
if(listOfValidStrings.contains(txtbox.text())
{ do something.}

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