I am working with the Exchange Web Services Managed API, with contact data. I have the following code, which is functional, but not ideal:

foreach (Contact c in contactList)
{
    string openItemUrl = "https://" + service.Url.Host + "/owa/" + c.WebClientReadFormQueryString;

    row = table.NewRow();
    row["FileAs"] = c.FileAs;
    row["GivenName"] = c.GivenName;
    row["Surname"] = c.Surname;
    row["CompanyName"] = c.CompanyName;
    row["Link"] = openItemUrl;

    //home address
    try { row["HomeStreet"] = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].Street.ToString(); }
    catch (Exception e) { }
    try { row["HomeCity"] = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].City.ToString(); }
    catch (Exception e) { }
    try { row["HomeState"] = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].State.ToString(); }
    catch (Exception e) { }
    try { row["HomeZip"] = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].PostalCode.ToString(); }
    catch (Exception e) { }
    try { row["HomeCountry"] = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].CountryOrRegion.ToString(); }
    catch (Exception e) { }

    //and so on for all kinds of other contact-related fields...
}

As I said, this code works. Now I want to make it suck a little less, if possible.

I can't find any methods that allow me to check for the existence of the key in the dictionary before attempting to access it, and if I try to read it (with .ToString()) and it doesn't exist then an exception is thrown:

500
The given key was not present in the dictionary.

How can I refactor this code to suck less (while still being functional)?

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3 Answers

up vote 15 down vote accepted

You can use ContainsKey:

if (dict.ContainsKey(key)) { ... }

or TryGetValue:

dict.TryGetValue(key, out value);

Update: according to a comment the actual class here is not an IDictionary but a PhysicalAddressDictionary, so the methods are Contains and TryGetValue but they work in the same way.

Example usage:

PhysicalAddressEntry entry;
PhysicalAddressKey key = c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].Street;
if (c.PhysicalAddresses.TryGetValue(key, out entry))
{
    row["HomeStreet"] = entry;
}

Update 2: here is the working code (compiled by question asker)

PhysicalAddressEntry entry;
PhysicalAddressKey key = PhysicalAddressKey.Home;
if (c.PhysicalAddresses.TryGetValue(key, out entry))
{
    if (entry.Street != null)
    {
        row["HomeStreet"] = entry.Street.ToString();
    }
}

...with the inner conditional repeated as necessary for each key required. The TryGetValue is only done once per PhysicalAddressKey (Home, Work, etc).

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+1 for TryGetValue – SLaks May 13 '10 at 20:02
The TryGetValue approach seems like it may be the best bet, since I found this page: goo.gl/7YN6... but I'm not sure how to use it. In my code above, row is a 'DataRow` object, so I'm not sure your example code is right, though... – Adam Tuttle May 13 '10 at 20:08
What am I doing wrong, here? c.PhysicalAddresses.TryGetValue(c.PhysicalAddresses[PhysicalAddressKey.Home].St‌​reet, row["HomeStreet"]); – Adam Tuttle May 13 '10 at 20:12
@Adam Tuttle: The second parameter is an out parameter. I'll try to guess at code that works and update my answer but you'll have to forgive mistakes as I can't compile it here. – Mark Byers May 13 '10 at 20:15
Thanks for your help. <3 SO. Amazingly fast and accurate, once again! :D – Adam Tuttle May 13 '10 at 20:39
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What is the type of c.PhysicalAddresses? If it's Dictionary<TKey,TValue>, then you can use the ContainsKey method.

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Exchange webservices "PhysicalAddressDictionary" type... – Adam Tuttle May 13 '10 at 20:04
Thanks, Adam, that's really (not) helpful. What's the class hierarchy? What's the base type? – John Saunders May 13 '10 at 20:44
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PhysicalAddressDictionary.TryGetValue

 public bool TryGetValue (
    PhysicalAddressKey key,
    out PhysicalAddressEntry physicalAddress
     )
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