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I have an enum that looks as follows:

public enum TransactionStatus { Open = 'O', Closed = 'C'};

and I'm pulling data from the database with a single character indicating - you guessed it - whether 'O' the transaction is open or 'C' the transaction is closed.

now because the data comes out of the database as an object I am having a heck of a time writing comparison code.

The best I can do is to write:

protected bool CharEnumEqualsCharObj(TransactionStatus enum_status, object obj_status) {
    return ((char)enum_status).ToString() == obj_status.ToString();
}

However, this is not the only character enum that I have to deal with, I have 5 or 6 and writting the same method for them is annoying to say the least. Supposedly all enums inherit from System.Enum but if I try to set that as the input type I get compilation errors. This is also in .NET 1.1 so generics are out of the question.

I've been struggling with this for a while. Does anyone have a better way of writing this method? Also, can anyone clarify the whole enums inherit from System.Enum but are not polymorphic thing?

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4 Answers

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    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        object val = 'O';
        Console.WriteLine(EnumEqual(TransactionStatus.Open, val));

        val = 'R';
        Console.WriteLine(EnumEqual(DirectionStatus.Left, val));

        Console.ReadLine();
    }

    public static bool EnumEqual(Enum e, object boxedValue)
    {                        
        return e.Equals(Enum.ToObject(e.GetType(), (char)boxedValue));
    }

    public enum TransactionStatus { Open = 'O', Closed = 'C' };
    public enum DirectionStatus { Left = 'L', Right = 'R' };
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Sir, I applaud you, I am not quite sure why that method signature works when what I've been trying didn't but you are awesome. – George Mauer Sep 19 '08 at 22:06
Were you using (Enum e, ...) or (enum e, ...). The former is the type, while the latter is the declaration keyword. Easy to get mixed up. – Paul Batum Sep 19 '08 at 22:14
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Enums are generally messy in c# so when using .NET 2.0 its common to wrap the syntax with generics to avoid having to write such clumsy code.

In .NET 1.1 you can do something like the below, although it's not much tidier than the original snippet:

        protected bool CharEnumEqualsCharObj(TransactionStatus enum_status, object obj_status)
        {
            return (enum_status == Enum.Parse(typeof(TransactionStatus), obj_status.ToString()));
        }

This is about the same amount of code but you are now doing enum rather than string comparison.

You could also use the debugger/documentation to see if obj_status really is an object or whether you can safely cast it to a string.

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This leaves me in the same conundrum of having to rewrite this function over and over even though everything supposedly inherits from Enum! – George Mauer Sep 19 '08 at 21:19
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I would take a look at Enum.Parse. It will let you parse your char back into the proper enum. I believe it works all the way back to C# 1.0. Your code would look a bit like this:

TransactionStatus status = (TransactionStatus)Enum.Parse(typeof(TransactionStatus), obj.ToString());
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I'm sorry, I don't get it - how would this help? I would now be comparing two enums, and that's wonderful, but what would the signature of the helper method be? – George Mauer Sep 19 '08 at 21:18
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If you just have to compare values you can use something like:

protected bool CharEnumEqualsCharObj(TransactionStatus enum_status, object obj_status) {
    return (char)enum_status == (char)obj_status;
}
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This a) does not address my concern about the method signature and b) will not compile since you cannot cast an object to a char – George Mauer Sep 19 '08 at 21:32

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