How do I get the key and value of item from OrderedDictionary by index?
3 Answers
orderedDictionary.Cast<DictionaryEntry>().ElementAt(index);
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2
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With this code you get the element. But how do I get the key and the value as in the SO question?– testingSep 12, 2014 at 10:02
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8
orderedDictionary.Cast<DictionaryEntry>().ElementAt(index).Key.ToString();
– testingSep 29, 2014 at 8:58 -
3+ 1 This should be the accepted answer actually. Verify here - referencesource.microsoft.com/#System/compmod/system/… Jan 2, 2019 at 19:10
There is not a direct built-in way to do this. This is because for an OrderedDictionary
the index is the key; if you want the actual key then you need to track it yourself. Probably the most straightforward way is to copy the keys to an indexable collection:
// dict is OrderedDictionary
object[] keys = new object[dict.Keys.Count];
dict.Keys.CopyTo(keys, 0);
for(int i = 0; i < dict.Keys.Count; i++) {
Console.WriteLine(
"Index = {0}, Key = {1}, Value = {2}",
i,
keys[i],
dict[i]
);
}
You could encapsulate this behavior into a new class that wraps access to the OrderedDictionary
.
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1I did same but see once: OrderedDictionary list = OrderItems; object strKey = list[e.OldIndex]; DictionaryEntry dicEntry = new DictionaryEntry(); foreach (DictionaryEntry DE in list) { if (DE.Value == strKey) { dicEntry.Key = DE.Key; dicEntry.Value = DE.Value; } }– Red SwanFeb 10, 2010 at 4:47
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5The index is definitely not the key - those are necessarily distinct constructs in an
OrderedDictionary
.– ConradFeb 26, 2015 at 19:14 -
2Downvoted because the index is not the key, as demonstrated in the answer by @martin-r-l– JustinApr 1, 2015 at 14:05
I created some extension methods that get the key by index and the value by key using the code mentioned earlier.
public static T GetKey<T>(this OrderedDictionary dictionary, int index)
{
if (dictionary == null)
{
return default(T);
}
try
{
return (T)dictionary.Cast<DictionaryEntry>().ElementAt(index).Key;
}
catch (Exception)
{
return default(T);
}
}
public static U GetValue<T, U>(this OrderedDictionary dictionary, T key)
{
if (dictionary == null)
{
return default(U);
}
try
{
return (U)dictionary.Cast<DictionaryEntry>().AsQueryable().Single(kvp => ((T)kvp.Key).Equals(key)).Value;
}
catch (Exception)
{
return default(U);
}
}
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3If your intent is to return default values if the targeted index/key is not in the dictionary you have chosen an expensive way to do it. Exceptions are very expensive relative to normal control-flow constructs like if/else. It would be much better to check for out-of-bounds indices and non-existing keys yourself than to rely on an exception happening.– OdradeJul 2, 2015 at 21:15