2

I am recieveing a string via a com port that looks like this *000000, or *110101, or anything in between. Each character represents the status of a relay on a PCB I have and the first character after the asterisk represents the first relay and so on. I need to check each character seperatly if it is a 1 or a 0 and then set a label to either ON or OFF accordingly.

My code would be something like this:

if(char 1 == "1")
{

    label4.Text = "ON";    
}
else
{
    label4.Text = "OFF";
}

and so on down the line for all 6 characters. But I don't know how to seperate each character.

Thanks!

4
  • use string.substring(startpos,length) to get a substring and act accordingly. Mar 24, 2012 at 9:04
  • What do you mean like indexing ? string a = "10"; char one = a[0]; char two = a[1]; It's hard to understand your question, which also contains a syntax error on line 1.
    – Gleno
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:05
  • char[] chArray = yourstring.ToCharArray(); will just return your string as a char arrray to work with..
    – Flowerking
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:07
  • @Flowerking: Why create an array for no reason? Just use the indexer.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:10

4 Answers 4

8

Sounds like you want to use the indexer on String to extract a single char:

string text = "*110101"; // Wherever you get this from...
label4.Text = text[1] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
label5.Text = text[2] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
label6.Text = text[3] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
label7.Text = text[4] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
label8.Text = text[5] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
label9.Text = text[6] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";

This assumes that you're happy for the label text to be set to "OFF" for any value other than '1'. (As noted in comments, you use double quotes for string literals, but single quotes for character literals.)

Note how I've used the conditional operator here to simplify the code: if you want to basically choose between two values ("ON" and "OFF") based on a condition, the conditional operator is much simpler than an if/else. Don't overdo it, of course, but it's worth becoming familiar with.

However, I would also suggest you might want to put the relevant labels into a collection. Then you could use something like:

for (int i = 0; i < 6; i++)
{
    toggles[i].Text = text[i + 1] == '1' ? "ON" : "OFF";
}
1
  • 3
    OP, note the single quotes around the 1s to specify a char rather than a string.
    – tomfanning
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:05
4

You already have the string?

You can use indexers on the string object to access the characters.

Example:

string s = "110110";
if (s[3] == '0') label4.Text = "ON";
1
  • 1
    Except that that will set it the other way round (1 should mean ON, not OFF) and it won't set it to "OFF" otherwise.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:07
1

you can get specific char by :

string relaysStatus = "100110";
char c = relaysStatus.ElementAt(0);

or you can convert then all to bool list:

var relays = relaysStatus.Select(q => q == '1').ToList();

3
  • While the second approach might be useful, I see no benefit in using ElementAt instead of the indexer on string.
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:18
  • Yes Sure me too but that was his question, i should answer him first then suggest better solution
    – HB MAAM
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:22
  • Where in the question did it ask to use LINQ? It asked to get at a single character in a string - and the indexer (e.g. text[0]) is simply a better way of doing that, IMO. It's more efficient and more readable. What do you think the benefit of using ElementAt is?
    – Jon Skeet
    Mar 24, 2012 at 9:40
1

Moving further, you can create extension method for converting chars to On/Off strings:

public static class CharExtensions
{
    public static string ToOnOff(this char ch)
    {
        return (ch == '1') ? "On" : "Off";
    }
}

After that you can use it (pretty clean code):

label1.Text = input[0].ToOnOff(); 
label2.Text = input[1].ToOnOff();

UPDATE: I think good point to check both '0' and '1' values. But it depends on your input string.

public static class CharExtensions
{
    public static string ToOffOn(this char ch)
    {
        switch (ch)
        {
            case '0' : return "Off";
            case '1': return "On";
            default:
                return ch.ToString(); // Or rise exception
        }            
    }
}

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