-2

Ok, so maybe I'm just tired or something but I can't seem to figure out why this keeps happening.

The code below is called every day for a data point in a database I have.

When I print to the console for debugging, it simply prints out as:

NamespaceName.SharePrices

Not sure what is going on.

       public void OnData(TradeBars data)
       {
        decimal price = data["IBM"].Price;
        DateTime today = data["IBM"].Time;
        //--------------Below works fine.
        if (today.Date >= nextTradeDate.Date)
        {
            MarketOnOpenOrder("IBM", 50);
            Debug("Purchased Stock");
            nextTradeDate = today.AddDays(1);
            MarketOnOpenOrder("IBM", -25);
        }
        var derpList = new SharePrices { theDate = today, sharePrice = price };
        List<SharePrices> newList = new List<SharePrices>();
        newList.Add(derpList);
        newList.ForEach(Console.WriteLine);
    }
}

public class SharePrices
{
    public DateTime theDate { get; set; }
    public decimal sharePrice { get; set; }
}

Please excuse my naming conventions. This is just a wireframe for a personal project.

//----------Edit

Thanks for the help guys. I guess what I wasn't understanding is why it was working in my TestClass I wrote just playing with fake data, and when the real implementation came it didn't work:

        public static void FindWindowDays()
    {
        DateTime currentDate = DateTime.Now;
        var dates = new List<DateTime>();
        for (var dt = currentDate.AddDays(-windowDays); dt <= currentDate; dt = dt.AddDays(1))
        {
            dates.Add(dt);
        }
        var ascending = dates.OrderByDescending(i => i);
        foreach (var datesyo in ascending)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(datesyo);
        }
    }

This seemed to work fine printing the DateTime to console without converting to string. But when I added the second element, it stopped working. That's where I got confuddled.

5
  • 4
    If you want it to display something more specific, you will have to override ToString().
    – dub stylee
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:26
  • 1
    Can you please clarify what part of Object.ToString is confusing for you? "Default implementations of the Object.ToString method return the fully qualified name of the object's type"... Or maybe WriteLine does not mention "the ToString method of value is called to produce its string representation"? Nov 19, 2015 at 23:42
  • It was confusing, because in my TestClass I wrote with dummy data it printed to console just fine, using DateTime and Decimal. I don't usually debug in console.
    – J. Rewo
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:53
  • The reason why it worked in your dummy class is because the built-in DateTime class has its own ToString() method. Your custom class does not, so C# defaults to the NamespaceName.ClassName if nothing is specified.
    – dub stylee
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:59

4 Answers 4

4

C# doesn't know anything about the SharePrices other than the class name. If you want it to display something specific, you will need to override the ToString() method like so:

public override string ToString()
{
    return "SharePrice: " + theDate.ToString() + ": " + sharePrice.ToString();
}

Of course, you can format it however you like, that is the beauty of it. If you only care about the price and not the date, only return the sharePrice.

2
  • Hrm, I see what you are saying. Can anyone think of a way to do this without converting to a string in the SharePrices class? I need to use the data later on down the line in another class.
    – J. Rewo
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:39
  • @J.Rewo, your data will not be changed. When you call .ToString() you will get just new string obj, without change state of your class.
    – ivamax9
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:49
2

You should override ToString() for your class in format as you want, for example like this:

public class SharePrices
{
    public DateTime theDate { get; set; }
    public decimal sharePrice { get; set; }

    public override string ToString()
    {
        return String.Format("The Date: {0}; Share Price: {1};", theDate, sharePrice);
    }
}

By default, without overriding, ToString() returns a string that represents the current object. So that's why you get what you described.

0
1

When you call Console.WriteLine on a class, it will call the ToString() method on that class automatically.

If you want to print the details out, you will over need to override ToString() in your class, or call Console.WriteLine with each property you want to print out.

0

this will work without having to use .ToString()

public class SharePrices
{
    public DateTime theDate { get; set; }
    public decimal sharePrice { get; set; }
}

SharePrices sp = new SharePrices() { theDate = DateTime.Now, sharePrice = 10 };

var newList2 = new List<SharePrices>();
newList2.Add(sp);
newList2.ForEach(itemX => Console.WriteLine("Date: {0} Sharprice: {1}",sp.theDate, sp.sharePrice));
3
  • I think foreach is waiting for Action<SharePrice>, but you pass Action<string>, so that's why you get compile error. Am I wrong?
    – ivamax9
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:48
  • this compiles just fine not sure what you are talking about also perhaps you're not use to seeing this type of looping through a List<T> object load up a List with some string and try it out
    – MethodMan
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:49
  • dotnetfiddle.net/PlXwFe , I'm talking about that. Take a look on question, he is looping through List<T>.
    – ivamax9
    Nov 19, 2015 at 23:51

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