4

I want to sort a List of the class Points in C# (See below) based first on x and then on y.

public class Point
{
    public int x;
    public int y;
    public Point(int xp, int yp)
    {
        x = xp;
        y = yp;
    }
}

How do you do this: I am brand new to C#, and are there any similarities to Java compare methods that implement custom comparitors for classes, and also I would like to add the compare method (int CompareTo) to the class to sort on the class.

Thanks in advance.

1
  • look at IComparable<T> . that would be a good starting point.
    – DarthVader
    Sep 13, 2012 at 5:16

4 Answers 4

8

Yes, you're looking for IComparable<T> and IComparer<T> - the latter is the equivalent of the Comparator<E> interface in Java.

If you want to add a comparison to the Point class itself, make Point implement IComparable<Point> (and possibly the non-generic IComparable interface too). If you want to implement the comparison elsewhere, make another class implement IComparer<Point>.

For equality, .NET also has IEquatable<T> and IEqualityComparer<T>. These are used for things like key comparisons in Dictionary<,>.

As a side note, I'd strongly encourage you not to have public fields - and you may well want to make the variables readonly. (Immutable types are generally easier to reason about.) You may decide to make Point a struct too, rather than a class.

2
  • I think IEquatable<T> is more general purpose which I can use for equality check anytime, whereas IEqualityComparer<T> is mostly used in IDictionary<T> for key checks and collisions etc.
    – DarthVader
    Sep 13, 2012 at 5:24
  • 1
    @DarthVader: No, not really. The difference is simply meant to be whether an object is in charge of comparing itself to another item, or whether a separate object can compare two other objects with each other... the same as IComparable and IComparer.
    – Jon Skeet
    Sep 13, 2012 at 5:28
4
var points = new List<Point>() { new Point(1,3), new Point(1,4), new Point(1,2) };
var sortedPoints = points.OrderBy(point => point.x).ThenBy(point => point.y);
2
  • List(of Point) does not compile in C#. I think you meant List<Point> Sep 13, 2012 at 5:28
  • @BrianRogers Lol. I do a lot of switching between VB and C# at work, I always do this. Suprised I didn't forget my semicolons too. Sep 13, 2012 at 5:29
1

You can implement the IComparable interface and implement its

public int CompareTo( object obj )

in this methode you can write the logic to compare two objects for example:

if (objectA.x > objectB.x)
  return 1
else if (objectA.x < objectB.x)
  return -1
else // compare y in both objects
0

The interface you want to implement in C# is IComparable<T>, which acts like Java's Comparable. Your code then becomes

public class Point : IComparable<Point>
{
    private int x;
    private int y;

    public int X
    {
        get { return x; }
    }

    public int Y
    {
        get { return y; }
    }

    public Point(int xp, int yp)
    {
        x = xp;
        y = yp;
    }

    public int CompareTo(Point other)
    {
        // Custom comparison here
    }
}

Note that I changed the public fields into private fields, and changed the public-facing interface into properties. This is more idiomatic C# - public fields are frowned upon in both Java and C#.

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