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2

Hi,

I just had an idea last nigth when writing an if-expression and sometimes the expression tend to be long when you have it like this:

if(x == 1 || x == 2 || x == 33 || x == 4 || x == -5 || x == 61) { ... }

x can be enums,strings,ints,chars you get the picture.

I want to know if there are an easier way of writing this. I think of sql's operator 'in' for example as a eay to shorten the expression:

if(x in (1,2,33,4,-5,61)) { ... }

I know you can't write an expression like this with 'in' because the lexer and parser of the compiler won't recognize it.

Perhaps other solutions as extension methods of different types of x is the solution? In the coming .NET 4.0 i heard something about parameterized methods, should that solve the n amount of parameters supplied to the if-expression ?

Perhaps you understand me, have you an idea of a good practice/solution to this question?

/Daniel

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I find the title a bit confusing. Seems like you want to use C# in an operator overload. I put the IN in caps for lack of better idea of how to make that more clear. – boris callens Nov 4 at 9:51
interesting question though – boris callens Nov 4 at 9:54

6 Answers

vote up 12 vote down

Try the following

if ( (new []{1,2,33,4,-5,61}).Any(i => x == i) ) {
  ...
}
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That's pretty stylish. – Programming Hero Nov 4 at 9:13
2  
With type inference you can even skip the int (I think). – Svish Nov 4 at 9:15
@Svish, didn't realize that was possible but verified it works with 2010 Beta2. Updated answer – JaredPar Nov 4 at 9:18
6  
I would use new []{1,2,33,4,-5,61}).Contains(x), Contains is usually used to determine if a sequence contains an element and therefore more explicit in expressing the intent, Any() is more generic even of you can make it act like contains by using a simple equality check – Pop Catalin Nov 4 at 9:22
1  
I think the extension method route is better design. In your solution, you are duplicating the logic of the In function every time you use it. With the extension method, the algorithm is centralised and can be changed globally if required - plus it also looks cleaner at the point of use. – Winston Smith Nov 4 at 9:54
show 1 more comment
vote up 12 vote down

I usually write an Extension Method as follows:

public static bool In<T>(this T source, params T[] list)
{
  if(null==source) throw new ArgumentNullException("source");
  return list.Contains(source);
}

Which can be used like this:

if(x.In(1,6,9,11))
{
      // do something....
}
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1  
I like this one because it is generic and uses the Contains method rather then the == operator. – boris callens Nov 4 at 10:05
vote up 1 vote down
    public static bool In<T>(this T X, params T[] list)
    {
        foreach (var item in list)
        {
            if (X.Equals(item))
                return true;
        }
        return false;
    }
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how about return list.Contains(x); ? – Pop Catalin Nov 4 at 9:26
array does not have Contains method – Alex Reitbort Nov 4 at 10:03
Array implements IEnumerable<T> which has a Contains extension method in System.Linq – Lee Nov 4 at 10:12
vote up 0 vote down
   string[] possible = new string[3] { 1, 2, 3);

   if (possible.Contains(x)) { ...
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I think you wanted int and not string there. – JaredPar Nov 4 at 9:14
I think the question was meant for all types. – boris callens Nov 4 at 9:53
1  
Hmm.. More coffee required. – Paddy Nov 4 at 10:56
vote up 0 vote down
    bool In<T>(T num, params int args)
    {
        return (new List<T>(args)).Contains(num);
    }
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1  
Why have a generic method, which only takes a list of ints? Consider using params T[] args instead - which you can then call .Contains on directly. – Winston Smith Nov 4 at 10:02
vote up 0 vote down

Given that x is an int you could write an extension method like so:

public static bool In(this int i, params int[] values){
    foreach(int v in values) {
        if (i == v) {
            return true;
        }
    }
    return false;
}
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