So you want to chain a number of very similar boolean expressions without writing them all explicitly.
if ((i % 1 == 0) && (i % 2 == 0) && (...) && (i % 20 == 0))
{
do action x
}
The first thing you could do is to extract the combined expression used in the if
statement into a new function. This makes your code more readable.
public static void Main()
{
// ...
if (DivisibleByAllUpTo20(i))
{
//do action x
}
// ...
}
private static bool DivisibleByAllUpTo20(int i)
{
return (i % 1 == 0) && (i % 2 == 0) && (...) && (i % 20 == 0);
}
DivisibleByAllUpTo20()
can then be implemented with a for
loop like you tried.
private static bool DivisibleByAllUpTo20(int i)
{
for (int b = 1; b < 21; b++)
{
if (i % b != 0)
return false;
}
return true;
}
By the way: the LINQ namespace provides lots of helper methods that lets you write such code much more concisely and cleaner:
using System.Linq;
// ...
if (Enumerable.Range(1, 20).All(n => n % i == 0))
{
// do action x
}