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I have a condition in a silverlight application that comapres 2 strings, for some reason when I use '==' it returns false while .Equals() returns true. Here is the code :

 if (((ListBoxItem)lstBaseMenu.SelectedItem).Content.Equals("Energy Attack"))
 {
// Execute code
 }

 if (((ListBoxItem)lstBaseMenu.SelectedItem).Content == "Energy Attack")
 {
// Execute code
 }

Any reason as to why this is happening?

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4 Answers

vote up 13 vote down check

When == is used on an object type, it'll resolve to System.Object.ReferenceEquals.

Equals is just a virtual method and behaves as such, so the overridden version will be used (which, for string type compares the contents).

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vote up 0 vote down

I am a bit confused here. If the runtime type of Content is of type string, then both == and Equals should return true. However, since this does not appear to be the case, then runtime type of Content is not string and calling Equals on it is doing a referential equality and this explains why Equals("Energy Attack") fails. However, in the second case, the decision as to which overloaded == static operator should be called is made at compile time and this decision appears to be ==(string,string). this suggests to me that Content provides an implicit conversion to string.

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vote up 5 vote down

What == and .Equals does is both dependent upon the behavior defined in the actual type and the actual type at the call site. Both are just methods / operators which can be overridden on any type and given any behavior the author so desires. In my experience, I find it's common for people to implement .Equals on an object but neglect to implement operator ==. This means that .Equals will actually measure the equality of the values while == will measure whether or not they are the same reference.

When I'm working with a new type whose definition is in flux or writing generic algorithms, I find the best practice is the following

  • If I want to compare references in C#, I use Object.ReferenceEquals directly (not needed in the generic case)
  • If I want to compare values I use EqualityComparer<T>.Default

In some cases when I feel the usage of == is ambiguous I will explicitly use Object.Reference equals in the code to remove the ambiguity.

Eric Lippert recently did a blog post on the subject of why there are 2 methods of equality in the CLR. It's worth the read

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Well Jared, you directly violate Jeff's famous “The best code is no code at all here.” Is this really justified? On the other hand, I can see where this stems from and why it might be desirable to make the semantics explicit. For this case, I very much prefer VB’s way of dealing with object equality. It's short and unambiguous. – Konrad Rudolph May 2 at 13:51
@Konrad, I really should have said "when I'm unfamiliar with a type, i find the best practice is the following". Yes VB has much better semantics here because it truly separates value and reference equality. C# mixes the two together and it occasionally causes ambiguity errors. – JaredPar May 2 at 14:04
vote up 3 vote down

INACCURATE: String.Equals compares string content, but "==" compares object references. If the two strings you are comparing are referring to the same exact instance of a string, both will return true, but if one of the strings has the same content and came from a different source (is a separate instance of a string), only Equals will return true.

CORRECTION: The second comment associated with this post is correct. The following code illustrates the issue:

string s1 = "test";
string s2 = "test";
string s3 = "test1".Substring(0, 4);
object s4 = s3;
Console.WriteLine("{0} {1} {2}", object.ReferenceEquals(s1, s2), s1 == s2, s1.Equals(s2));
Console.WriteLine("{0} {1} {2}", object.ReferenceEquals(s1, s3), s1 == s3, s1.Equals(s3));
Console.WriteLine("{0} {1} {2}", object.ReferenceEquals(s1, s4), s1 == s4, s1.Equals(s4));

The output is:
True True True
False True True
False False True

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Spot on. The '==' operator compares object references (shallow comparison) whereas .Equals() compares object content (deep comparison). As @mehrdad said, .Equals() is overridden to provide that deep content comparison. – Andrew May 2 at 13:43
That posting is wrong. Mehrdad has the correct answer, and it differs in one crucial detail. == for strings behaves exactly like Equals! – Konrad Rudolph May 2 at 13:48
I will leave the post here because I think it's valuable to emphasize what's not happening since you have to be paying close attention to realize it. (And I think the code to demonstrate the correct and incorrect understandings is worthwhile too.) I hope the rating won't go below 0. – BlueMonkMN May 2 at 14:39

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