1

I am trying to read from a csv file with the following code -

        List<Person> people = new List<Person>();
        Person personToAdd = new Person();


        TextFieldParser parser = new TextFieldParser(@"C:\Users\user\Documents\Book1.csv");
        parser.TextFieldType = FieldType.Delimited;
        parser.SetDelimiters(",");
        while (!parser.EndOfData)
        {
            //Processing row
            string[] fields = parser.ReadFields();
            int counter = 0;

            foreach (string field in fields)
            {
                personToAdd.username = fields[0];
                personToAdd.firstName = fields[1];
                personToAdd.lastName = fields[2];
                personToAdd.email = fields[3];
                personToAdd.password = fields[4];
                personToAdd.role = fields[5];

                people.Add(personToAdd);
            }
        }
        parser.Close();

This code does read from the CSV file, but every entry in my people object contains the last entry that was listed in the CSV file. I'm sure this is a fairly simple change, but I'm quite new to this and can't figure it out.

1 Answer 1

7

You should move the creation and initialization of the Person instance inside the while loop and remove the foreach loop. The fields are reloaded at every while loop

...
while (!parser.EndOfData)
{
    // Loading the fields of a Person 
    string[] fields = parser.ReadFields();

    // Starting the process that creates a new Person 
    Person personToAdd = new Person();
    personToAdd.username = fields[0];
    personToAdd.firstName = fields[1];
    personToAdd.lastName = fields[2];
    personToAdd.email = fields[3];
    personToAdd.password = fields[4];
    personToAdd.role = fields[5];

    // Adding the new person to the list
    people.Add(personToAdd);

} ....

In your example above, the creation of the instance is outside the loop. Inside the loop you change the properties of the same instance and read it at every loop. When you exit the loop all the items addeded point to the same instance with the value set for the last line read from the file

Instead creating a new instance inside the loop guarantees that every item added to the list is a different one with different data in its properties.

4
  • Hi, I tried that and now instead of every object in my list storing the last entry, they now store the first? edit - sorry that's not correct. The first 6 objects of person hold the same values, then the second 6 hold the same values and so on. There is still something wrong with my looping. Feb 3, 2015 at 11:10
  • There is also an error. You should remove the foreach loop, Fixing the answer with a more complete example
    – Steve
    Feb 3, 2015 at 11:17
  • Right. And also the code doesn't use the field variable created in the foreach.
    – AndrewC
    Feb 3, 2015 at 11:20
  • OK I got it working. I needed to move the people.Add(personToAdd) line outside of the loop. Cheers for the help. And you are correct I don't need the for each loop as it is. Feb 3, 2015 at 11:21

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