22

I pass a two-dimensional array as a property to my user control. There I store this values in another two-dimensional array:

int[,] originalValues = this.Metrics;

Later, I change values in this.Metrics. But now if I retrieve values from originalValues, I get the changed values from this.Metrics. How do I make a copy of the elements of this.Metrics and don't just get the reference of the array?

5
  • 1
    In case someone stumble here, now there is 'Array.Clone()'. (.net 4.5)
    – Aelian
    Mar 24, 2015 at 23:20
  • 2
    @Jeevaka This question is specifically asking about making a deep copy of an array. According to the MSDN docs, Array.Clone() "Creates a shallow copy of the Array." (emphasis added).
    – jmbpiano
    Jul 15, 2016 at 17:36
  • 1
    @ jmbpiano: Well, if I am right:, 'int's are stored by value, not by reference. What would happen here is that Array.Clone() would create a new Array object and copy whatever in the memory referenced by 'this.Matrices' reference. Because the contents of the array are not references, the new copy would not share anything with the original. If these were not 'int's but something derived from 'object' your argument would be correct. I guess we can always try and see.
    – Aelian
    Jul 15, 2016 at 21:36
  • Yes, all you need here is a shallow copy. Shallow = 1 data level deep. And that's all you need here since int is immutable.
    – Nyerguds
    Nov 28, 2016 at 9:53
  • @jmbpiano I changed the wording of the question to reflect its spirit. OP was clearly interested in specifically a shallow copy but used the wrong term.
    – Ruzihm
    Nov 14, 2018 at 19:47

9 Answers 9

31

You can clone an array, which makes a copy of it:

int[,] originalValues = (int[,])this.Metrics.Clone();
8
  • 31
    Clone does not make a deep copy (except int he trivial cases of value type arrays). Oct 29, 2010 at 16:57
  • 15
    Little secret: the question is about an int array. Anything else than this would be quite overkill. Oct 29, 2010 at 16:59
  • 3
    lol, i was just answering the general question. Why ask for a deep copy of a value type? Oct 29, 2010 at 17:01
  • I think the OP thinks this is an array of arrays, not a multi dimensional array :). Oct 29, 2010 at 17:02
  • I dont know but in Java I always called this a 2dimensional array and nobody disagreed ;) Any yes, I need it only for ints. Oct 29, 2010 at 17:12
31

I don't know where I got this from, but this works well for me.

public static class GenericCopier<T>    //deep copy a list
    {
        public static T DeepCopy(object objectToCopy)
        {
            using (MemoryStream memoryStream = new MemoryStream())
            {
                BinaryFormatter binaryFormatter = new BinaryFormatter();
                binaryFormatter.Serialize(memoryStream, objectToCopy);
                memoryStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin);
                return (T)binaryFormatter.Deserialize(memoryStream);
            }
        }
    }
4
  • This one is a bit more costly than the Array.Copy answer by Brian Scott
    – Nicholas
    Apr 29, 2015 at 9:28
  • 8
    Calling this an overkill is like calling a supernova "boom" :D May 11, 2015 at 8:49
  • Another way to clone List<T> is as follows \n var clonedList = new List(sampleList);
    – Navap
    Jan 11, 2017 at 2:39
  • This was the best solution for me as I have arrays of nested objects. The nested objects can also have arrays. It should also be mentioned that each object must have the [Serializable] attribute for this to work.
    – rrirower
    Sep 13, 2017 at 20:47
12

The crux of your problem is here:

There I store this values in another two-dimensional array

This is actually inaccurate. You are not creating a new array; you are setting your originalValues variable to the same array. For a more detailed explanation, see below.


The confusion expressed in the comments to Pieter's answer is due to some uncertainty surrounding the term "deep copy."

When it comes to copying objects, there's deep copying and shallow copying.

Deep copying involves making a copy of all the data belonging to an object, which means that if the object includes members which are themselves complex (for example, instances of user-defined reference types), those objects must be deep-copied as well (along with all of their members, and so on).

Shallow copying involves simply copying all of the fields from one object to another, which means that if the object includes reference types, only the references need to be copied (and so the copied references will be pointing to the same objects).

In the case of the code you've posted:

int[,] originalValues = this.Metrics;

... there's actually no copying of any objects at all. All you've done is copied a single reference, assigning the value of this.Metrics (a reference) to the variable originalValues (also a reference, to the very same array). This is essentially the same as a simple value assignment, like this:

int x = y; // No objects being copied here.

Now, the Array.Clone method makes, in fact, a shallow copy. But as Pieter pointed out, there's really no difference between a "shallow" or "deep" copy of an array of integers, since integers are not complex objects.

If you had something like this:

StringBuilder[,] builders = GetStringBuilders();
StringBuilder[,] builderCopies = (StringBuilder[,])builders.Clone();

..., you'd end up with a whole new array (a copy, yes), but one containing all of the same StringBuilder objects (so a shallow copy). This is where deep versus shallow copying comes into play; if you wanted a new array containing copies of all of the StringBuilder objects from builders, you'd need to make a deep copy.

2
  • Well, int x = y; does copy something; int is immutable and assigning it to a new variable will always create a copy. But yes, that is essentially what happens here, only, the copied value is the reference to the array, not the array itself.
    – Nyerguds
    Nov 28, 2016 at 9:57
  • Very well explained. Its impossible to create a shallow copy of value type arrays like int[], even though the individual elements of an int[] are stored on the heap. Shallow copies can only be made if the array is of some user-defined type.
    – Sunil
    Dec 22, 2023 at 8:34
9

If the object you are copying is an array, then you can use:

Array.Copy(sourceArray, destinationArray, sourceArray.Count)

This will give you a separate copy of the original array into your destination array.

1
  • Shouldn't it be Array.Copy(sourceArray, destinationArray, sourceArray.Count()) or Array.Copy(sourceArray, destinationArray, sourceArray.Length)? Feb 15, 2023 at 12:49
2

If you want to deep copy an array of reference types, you can do this methodology:

Implement IClonable iterface for your class and do your deep copy of all value typed fields inside to another constructed object.

class A: ICloneable {
     int field1;
     public object Clone()
        {
            A a= new A();
            //copy your fields here 
            a.field1 = this.field1;
            ...
        }
}

Then you can do the actual copy using

A[] array1 = new A[]{....};
A[] array2 = array1.Select(a => a.Clone()).ToList();
2

IClonable is great but unless you IClonable every type in your top level cloned type, you end up with references, AFAIK.

Based on that, unless you want to walk the object and clone each object within, this seems the simplest approach.

It's simple and guarantees a clean break from references of deep objects in the original:

using Newtonsoft.Json;

private T DeepCopy<T>(object input) where T : class
{
    var copy = JsonConvert.SerializeObject((T)input); // serialise to string json object
    var output = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<T>(copy); // deserialise back to poco
    return output;
}

Usage:

var x = DeepCopy<{ComplexType}>(itemToBeCloned);

Where ComplexType is anything wanting a break from references.

It takes any Type in, stringifies it, then de-stringifies to a new copy.

Best use example: If you've selected a complex type as a result of a lambda query and want to modify the result without affecting the original.

1

You need to create a new array. You then need to manually copy the value of each element into the new array. What you are doing in the example given is to create two array variables which both reference the same array.

The problem with the clone method is that it is a shallow copy. In this isntance, because you are using int, it does not mater. Howver, if you had an array of classes the definition of the ICLonable interface leaves it ambiguous as to how deep the clone will go.

Imagine if you had a class that has properties that are other classes which has properties that are other classes. The clonable interface does not state whether it will also clone the sub members or not. Moreover, many people have different views on what the expected behaviour is.

Hence this is why it is often recommended to define two interfaces, IShallowCopy and IDeepCopy.

1

You can deepcopy a 1d array using LINQ.

var array = Enumerable.Range(0, 10).ToArray();
var array2 = array.Select(x => x).ToArray();
array2[0] = 5;
Console.WriteLine(array[0]);  // 0
Console.WriteLine(array2[0]); // 5

With 2d array, this will not work because 2d array doesn't implement IEnumerable.

0

Here is a fast solution that is almost similar than some answers here, but which mention MemberwiseClone.

I have POCO classes that only contains reference values.

public class MyPoco {
    public int x { get; set; }
    public int y { get; set; }
    public int z { get; set; }

    // Add a "Clone" method.
    public MyPoco Clone() {
        return (MyPoco)this.MemberwiseClone();
    }
}

Then use LINQ to build a new array of clones:

var myClone = MyPocoArray.Select(x => x.Clone).ToArray();

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