-1

I have this piece of code:

if (filter != RECENT &&
    filter != TODAY &&
    filter != WEEK &&
    filter != MONTH &&
    filter != ALLTIME)
{
    filter = RECENT;
}

Note that filter is a string and it's compared against const string types. Is there any way to do this inline and have it be more readable? Doing it with the ternary operator doesn't make it much better since I still have to repeat filter != XXXXX

filter = filter != RECENT &&
         filter != TODAY &&
         filter != WEEK &&
         filter != MONTH &&
         filter != ALLTIME ? RECENT : filter;

and this clearly doesn't work

filter = filter != RECENT && TODAY && WEEK && MONTH && ALLTIME ? RECENT : filter;

Is there any prettier way (prettier == all of the logic must be in a single line of code) to do this comparison? More specifically to prevent filter != XXXXX repetition.

Note that performance is not my primary concern for this question.

9
  • 1
    Depends on what Filter actually is. Is it an enum? If so, is it an enum with a [Flags] attribute?
    – user2819245
    Oct 27, 2018 at 10:24
  • @elgonzo filter is just a string. It's being compared against constants, eg. const string RECENT = "recent";.
    – bezbos.
    Oct 27, 2018 at 10:26
  • 3
    You could put those strings perhaps in an array and use Linq. If you then further create/use a static method -- or better an extension method -- with a params string[] ... argument (the params string[] argument would be the string array i talked about), you can simplify your testing to something like filter.IsNot(Filter.RECENT, Filter.TODAY, ...)
    – user2819245
    Oct 27, 2018 at 10:29
  • 3
    Make an array of your constants and then !array.Contains(filter) or consider using enum as elgonzo suggested. We don't know your application but from what we know it could be a better practice than comparing strings. Oct 27, 2018 at 10:31
  • 1
    True, suggesting Linq in this scenario here might perhaps be a bit overkill; functions provided by the array type (such as Contains) might be all you need...
    – user2819245
    Oct 27, 2018 at 10:37

2 Answers 2

1

I Prefer create an extension method .

  public static bool NotIn(this string filter , params string[] valuesToCompare)
    {
        var result = true;
        foreach (var item in valuesToCompare)
        {
            if (filter == item) return false;
        }
        return result;
    }

and use like

if( filter.NotIn("RECENT", "TODAY ", "WEEK ", "MONTH", "ALLTIME"))
  {
     filter = "RECENT";
  }
2
  • The downside of this approach is the creation of an array on every invocation.
    – mjwills
    Oct 27, 2018 at 12:32
  • Additionally, the foreach could be replaced with Contains.
    – mjwills
    Oct 27, 2018 at 12:56
0

Note this answer was written before the OP clarified that they wanted only single line solutions.

Using an HashSet

Case-sensitive comparison:

var filters = new HashSet<string>(new[] { RECENT, TODAY, WEEK, MONTH, ALLTIME });

if (!filters.Contains(filter))
{
    filter = RECENT;
}

Case-insensitive comparison:

var filters = new HashSet<string>(StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase);
filters.UnionWith(new[] { RECENT, TODAY, WEEK, MONTH, ALLTIME });

if (!filters.Contains(filter))
{
    filter = RECENT;
}

Using an array of strings

Case-sensitive comparison:

string[] filters = {RECENT, TODAY, WEEK, MONTH, ALLTIME};

if (!filters.Contains(filter))
{
    filter = RECENT;
}

Case-insensitive comparison:

string[] filters = {RECENT, TODAY, WEEK, MONTH, ALLTIME};

if (!filters.Contains(filter, StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase))
{
    filter = RECENT;
}

EDIT

The ternary operator ?: could be used instead of the if statement, but IMO that would make the code less readable. Also, from a debugging perspective, it's easier to set a breakpoint inside the if statement to check if the array contains the filter, as opposed to setting the breakpoint using the operator ?::

Breakpoints

0

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