2

I keep getting this error on the second prepopulated... Cannot implicity convert type string to System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable and I am unsure of what I am doing wrong.

namespace HomeInventory2
{
    public partial class Form1 : Form
    {
        public Form1(string prepopulated)
        {
            InitializeComponent();
            IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated;
            textBoxAmount.Text = lines.ElementAtOrDefault(0);
            textBoxCategories.Text = lines.ElementAtOrDefault(1);
            textBoxProperties.Text = lines.ElementAtOrDefault(2);
            textBoxValue.Text = lines.ElementAtOrDefault(3);
        }

        private void label1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {

        }

        private void submitButton_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
        {
            CreateInventory create = new CreateInventory();
            create.ItemAmount = textBoxAmount.Text;
            create.ItemCategory = textBoxCategories.Text;
            create.ItemProperties = textBoxValue.Text;
            create.ItemValue = textBoxValue.Text;

            InventoryMngr invtryMngr = new InventoryMngr();
            invtryMngr.Create(create);

        }
    }
3
  • 7
    Did you read the message?
    – SLaks
    Oct 19, 2012 at 16:42
  • Is it a compilation error or a runtime error?
    – Ikaso
    Oct 19, 2012 at 16:42
  • What is prepopulated filled with? What do you expect to be in lines? Oct 19, 2012 at 16:46

6 Answers 6

4

This line

IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated;

prepopulated is a string and you are trying to assign it to a List of strings. Maybe you want to Split() it first? Or maybe your Form's constructor should take a List of strings to begin with.

3

You are trying to assign string to IEnumerable<string> here:

public Form1(string prepopulated)
{
    // ...
    IEnumerable<string> lines = prepopulated;
    // ...
}

You should refactor contructor to something like this:

public Form1(IEnumerable<string> prepopulated)
{
    // ...
    IEnumerable<string> lines = prepopulated;
    // ...
}
3
  • Yeah - I suspect that's the case, too - most of the votes had this happen. Oct 19, 2012 at 16:48
  • you cannot be serious? if you look at this guy profile he has 6 questions asking for the same code over and over again, and piece by piece from all the answers you will eventually get this code. I can understand you want to help, but pulling the, he someone is downvoting a legit answer card is stupid. no one should have answered this question and it should be flagged, as should his profile. Oct 19, 2012 at 16:52
  • 2
    @Rikkos do you really think I am tracking every person posting a question? I saw his question and I've answered, which seems rather normal to me. Really, I don't understand you, I (and others) should be downvoted because he is posting wrong (at least for you) question? ;)
    – Zbigniew
    Oct 19, 2012 at 16:57
2

You have your constructor taking a single string as a parameter:

public Form1(string prepopulated)

You then are trying to set this to an IEnumerable<string>:

IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated;

You need to, instead, pass in an IEnumerable<string>:

public Form1(IEnumerable<string> prepopulated)

If your prepopulated string is a string which can be parsed into multiple strings, you could do that instead. For example, if it's "prepopulated" with a string with newline separations, you could instead do something like:

IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated.Split(new[] {'\n'}, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries); // Split into separate lines
1

As the error message clearly states, you cannot assign a string to an IEnumerable<String>.

You may want to call .Split().

0

Try passing the parameter prepopulated as of type IEnumerable<String>

public Form1(IEnumerable<String> prepopulated)
{
    InitializeComponent();
    IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated;
    // ....
}

OR

Assuming your string is like ABC, DEF, GHI, then you can do something like this:

// where String Split is based on comma (,)
IEnumerable<String> lines = prepopulated.Split(new[] { ',' }, 
    StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries).Select(s => s.Trim());

You get the result:

ABC
DEF
GHI
0

You can't add to the IEnumerable but you can do something of the following.

IEnumerable<String> lines = new List<string>();
//or
//IEnumerable<String> lines = Enumerable.Empty<string>();
//IEnumerable<String> lines = Enumerable.Repeat("My string",1); //only single value
//IEnumerable<String> lines = new string[] {"My string","My other string"}

//or
var lines = new List<string>();
lines.Add("My string");
lines.Add("My other string");   

IEnumerable<String> ienumLines = lines;
return ienumLines;

//or add an extension method

public static void AddRange<T>(this ICollection<T> collection, IEnumerable<T> items) 
{
    foreach(T item in items) 
    {
       collection.Add(item);
    }
}

Regards

1
  • There is no "add" method in IEnumerable<T>, nor is this an object you can create via new, as it's an interface. Oct 19, 2012 at 16:59

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