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If I have a Dictionary<String,...> is it possible to make methods like ContainsKey case-insensitive?

This seemed related, but I didn't understand it properly: c# Dictionary: making the Key case-insensitive through declarations

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6 Answers 6

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This seemed related, but I didn't understand it properly: c# Dictionary: making the Key case-insensitive through declarations

It is indeed related. The solution is to tell the dictionary instance not to use the standard string compare method (which is case sensitive) but rather to use a case insensitive one. This is done using the appropriate constructor:

var dict = new Dictionary<string, YourClass>(
        StringComparer.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase);

The constructor expects an IEqualityComparer which tells the dictionary how to compare keys.

StringComparer.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase gives you an IEqualityComparer instance which compares strings in a case-insensitive manner.

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  • 24
    Possible, the StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase comparer faster than culture-based: stackoverflow.com/questions/492799/… Mar 30, 2015 at 12:03
  • How do I do it if I am not creating a dictionary but trying to use ContainsKey() for a case insensitive key match on an existing dictionary that I get as a part of an object? Jun 22, 2018 at 9:41
  • 1
    @ShridharRKulkarni You fundamentally can't (efficiently). The comparison logic is a core part of the internal dictionary data structure. To allow this, the container would have to maintain multiple indices for its data, and dictionaries don't do this. Jun 22, 2018 at 10:53
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var myDic = new Dictionary<string, string>(StringComparer.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase);
myDic.Add("HeLlo", "hi");

if (myDic.ContainsKey("hello"))
    Console.WriteLine(myDic["hello"]);
0
19

There are few chances where your deal with dictionary which is pulled from 3rd party or external dll. Using linq

YourDictionary.Any(i => i.KeyName.ToLower().Contains("yourstring")))
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    This works great. A word of caution though, if you change Any to SingleOrDefault you will not get null back if it doesn't exist, instead you will get a keyvaluepair with both key and value set to null!
    – NibblyPig
    Mar 2, 2017 at 14:10
  • 3
    Contains Seems like a very specific use-case to something you were working on at the time. As a more generic helpful answer, I think Equals is better. And on that same note, instead of duplicating a string with ToLower(), It would be even better to use StringComparison.xxxCase.
    – Suamere
    Feb 6, 2018 at 17:37
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    I am so tempted downvote this. Word of caution, if you are the owner of the dictionary this is most certainly not the way to do it. Only use this approach if you dont know how the dictionary was instantiated. Even then, for exact match of string (not just part match), use dict.Keys.Contains("bla", appropriate comparer) LINQ overload for ease of use.
    – nawfal
    Jul 23, 2019 at 11:26
  • ToLower make a lot of GC work - do not use this in an hot path / performance scope
    – bertasoft
    Dec 13, 2022 at 11:56
14

If you have no control in the instance creation, let say your object is desterilized from json etc, you can create a wrapper class that inherits from dictionary class.

public class CaseInSensitiveDictionary<TValue> : Dictionary<string, TValue>
{
    public CaseInSensitiveDictionary() : base(StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase){}
}
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  • How can you do this with keeping the Dictionary<T1, T2> syntax ? Dec 7, 2020 at 12:50
5

I just ran into the same kind of trouble where I needed a caseINsensitive dictionary in a ASP.NET Core controller.

I wrote an extension method which does the trick. Maybe this can be helpful for others as well...

public static IDictionary<string, TValue> ConvertToCaseInSensitive<TValue>(this IDictionary<string, TValue> dictionary)
{
    var resultDictionary = new Dictionary<string, TValue>(StringComparer.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase);
    foreach (var (key, value) in dictionary)
    {
        resultDictionary.Add(key, value);
    }

    dictionary = resultDictionary;
    return dictionary;
}

To use the extension method:

myDictionary.ConvertToCaseInSensitive();

Then get a value from the dictionary with:

myDictionary.ContainsKey("TheKeyWhichIsNotCaseSensitiveAnymore!");
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    Now test the performance with a few million items in the dictionary..... Mar 3, 2022 at 13:32
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I know this is an older question, but I had the same issue where the dictionary is coming from a 3rd party tool that did not implement an ignore case StringComparer in the constructor. Tweaked from the method @Soviut has above, but feel this is a lot cleaner and lets you work with the value immediately.

var lookup = source.FirstOrDefault(x => x.Key.Equals("...", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase));
if (lookup.Key != null)

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