I would like to choose the third element from an enum containing three elements while knowing which two I have already chosen. What is the most effcient way of comparing enums?
EDIT:
So far I have come up with the following:
Drawable.Row alternateChoice = (Drawable.Row)ExtensionMethods.Extensions.DefaultChoice(new List<int>() { (int)chosenEnum1, (int)chosenEnum2 }, new List<int>() { 0, 1, 2 });
Drawable.Row is the enum, the first list is what has already been chosen, and the second list contains the possible choices. The definition of DefaultChoice follows. I am aware it has quadratic time-complexity which is why I'm asking for a better solution:
public static int DefaultChoice(List<int> chosen, List<int> choices)
{
bool found = false;
foreach (int choice in choices)
{
foreach (int chosenInt in chosen)
{
if (chosenInt == choice)
{
found = true;
break;
}
}
if (!found)
{
return choice;
}
found = false;
}
return -1;
}
Not a real question
. It's easy to tell what is being asked here. This question is not ambiguous, vague, incomplete or overly broad and can be reasonably answered in its current form.Enum.GetValues()
and enumerate over it. It gets more complex if the enum in question is decorated with the [Flags] attribute as you then have do deal with all the possible combinations. Also, don't forget that an enum may hold any value that will fit in its underlying type, simply by casting:MyEnum foo = (MyEnum) 99999 ;
is perfectly valid, regardless of whetherMyEnum
maps a name to the value99999
.