I've been trying to figure out how the CompareTo()
method works internally and I failed. I've searched this site and read some posts, and I think I've seen all there is to see in MSDN about this subject and I just don't seem to get it. An MSDN example:
public int CompareTo(object obj)
{
if (obj == null)
{
return 1;
}
Temperature otherTemperature = obj as Temperature;
if (otherTemperature != null)
{
return this.temperatureC.CompareTo(otherTemperature.temperatureC);
}
else
{
throw new ArgumentException("the object is not a temperature");
}
}
This is the MSDN example of the implementation of the CompareTo()
method. I understand this, I understand how the IComparable
interface works, if I understood correctly this gets called when I use the ArrayList.Sort()
method.
What I don't understand is: when does the program pass the argument for the CompareTo(object obj)
method? Or in other words, how does the Sort()
method work? I mean, this code is comparing the instance of a temperature with another instance of temperature, but when or how is the program getting the second temperature instance for the comparison to take place? I hope my question makes sense.
I've tried printing to the screen the CompareTo()
process so maybe I could reverse-engineer the output but I confused myself even more.
EDIT:
Maybe if I go step by step I can explain myself better. Suppose I have 3 temperatures objects: 34, 45, 21 in an ArrayList
. When I call ArrayList.Sort()
, is the CompareTo()
method called like 34.CompareTo(45)
? And then 45.CompareTo(21)
? The returned integers would be 1 in the first comparison and -1 in the second? And how did those integers get returned if I only defined the CompareTo()
method to return 1 only if the obj (the parameter) was null? I didn't define anything to return -1 or 0. It's as if I was implementing a method that's already been implemented. Defining a CompareTo()
method when it's already defined to return -1, 0 and 1.