13

I've got an Enum marked with the [Flags] attribute as follows:

[Flags]
public enum Tag : int
{
    None = 0,
    PrimaryNav = 1,
    HideChildPages = 2,
    HomePage = 4,
    FooterLink = 8
}

On sitemapnodes in my sitemap I store the int value for the tags combination as an attribute.

What I need to do is check if a node has any one of one or more tags, e.g. Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage.

I'm struggling with the necessary boolean logic to determine if an Enum value has one or more of the values it's being compared with.

Apologies if this isn't clear. I can provide more information if necessary.

1
  • See also this answer. It handles only checking for "any one of all defined flags", but you may be able to adapt it.
    – Timo
    Oct 7, 2021 at 15:36

8 Answers 8

28

You can do that by combining values with | and checking via &.

To check if the value contains either of the tags:

if ((myValue & (Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage)) != 0) { ... }

The | combines the enums you're testing (bitwise) and the & tests via bitwise masking -- if the result isn't zero, it has at least one of them set.

If you want to test whether it has both of them set, you can do that as well:

Tag desiredValue = Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage;
if ((myValue & desiredValue) == desiredValue) { ... }

Here we're masking off anything we don't care about, and testing that the resulting value equals what we do care about (we can't use != 0 like before because that would match either value and here we're interested in both).

Some links:

0
9

You can use the HasFlag Method to avoid the need for the boolean logic,

Tag Val = (Tag)9;

if (Val.HasFlag(Tag.PrimaryNav))
{
    Console.WriteLine("Primary Nav");
}

if(Val.HasFlag(Tag.HomePage))
{
    Console.WriteLine("Home Page");
}
2
  • 1
    This method is new in .NET 4.0, so it won't work if the OP is using an earlier version... Mar 9, 2010 at 12:59
  • yea then use any of the other methods list just wanted to throw it out there.
    – rerun
    Mar 9, 2010 at 13:04
2

For bitwise (Flags) enums, an "any of" test is != 0, so:

const Tag flagsToLookFor = Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage;
if ((node.Tag & flagsToLookFor) != 0) {
    // has some cross-over with PrimaryNav or HomePage (and possibly others too) 
}
0
1
var someEnumValue = Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage;

To test if the enum contains a given value:

if ((someEnumValue & Tag.PrimaryNav) == Tag.PrimaryNav)
{

}
1
var tag = Tag.HideChildPages | Tag.PrimaryNav;

If ((tag & Tag.PrimaryNav) == Tag.PrimaryNav) {
    // Tag.PrimaryNav set.
}
1

You could use Jon Skeet's Unconstrained Melody library:

var someEnumValue = Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HideChildPages;
someEnumValue.HasAny(Tag.PrimaryNav | Tag.HomePage); // Returns true
0

You can use this extension method on enum, for any type of enums:

public static bool IsSingle(this Enum value)
    {
        var items = Enum.GetValues(value.GetType());
        var counter = 0;
        foreach (var item in items)
        {
            if (value.HasFlag((Enum)item))
            {
                counter++;
            }
            if (counter > 1)
            {
                return false;
            }
        }
        return true;
    }
0

That's a classic Extension method:

    public static bool HasFlag(this Enum val, Enum t)
    {
            return (Convert.ToUInt64(val) & Convert.ToUInt64(t)) != 0;
    }
1
  • Obviously locate it in a public static class, located in a namespace you've added to the "using" in your class
    – ephraim
    Oct 13, 2020 at 13:33

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.