-3

\Edited the code getting exception at sb.Append(" Allow Prefixes: ") line \An exception of type 'System.ArgumentNullException' occurred in System.Core.dll but was not handled in user code

public partial class IndexingPolicy : IEquatable

{
  public IndexingPolicy(List<string> allowPrefixes = default(List<string>), List<string> denyPrefixes = default(List<string>), bool? disableIndexing = default(bool?))

    {

        this.AllowPrefixes = allowPrefixes;

        this.DenyPrefixes = denyPrefixes;

        this.DisableIndexing = disableIndexing;
    }


    [DataMember(Name="allowPrefixes", EmitDefaultValue=false)]

    public List<string> AllowPrefixes { get; set; }


    [DataMember(Name="denyPrefixes", EmitDefaultValue=false)]

    public List<string> DenyPrefixes { get; set; }


    [DataMember(Name="disableIndexing", EmitDefaultValue=false)]

    public bool? DisableIndexing { get; set; }


   ").Append(DisableIndexing).Append("\n");

    public override string ToString()
    {
        var sb = new StringBuilder();

        sb.Append("class IndexingPolicy {\n");

        sb.Append(" AllowPrefixes: ").Append(
          string.Join(",", AllowPrefixes.ToList())
        ).Append("\n");


        sb.Append(" DenyPrefixes: ").Append(
          string.Join(",", DenyPrefixes.ToList())
        ).Append("\n");

        sb.Append("  DisableIndexing: ").Append(DisableIndexing).Append("\n");

        sb.Append("}\n");

        return sb.ToString();
    }
6
  • 1
    I think I can guess what AllowPrefixes is, but just in case, can you add it to the question?
    – user47589
    May 15, 2018 at 18:25
  • 1
    Please post code that actually compiles; for example AllowPrefixes, DenyPrefixes, and DisableIndexing are all undefined in your code. Also, use AppendLine() instead of Append("\n"). May 15, 2018 at 18:27
  • 1
    Possible duplicate of Convert a list to a string in C#
    – Caramiriel
    May 15, 2018 at 18:34
  • 1
    @MaxvonHippel it's a List<string>, according to the output.
    – user47589
    May 15, 2018 at 18:37
  • 2
    Please do not vandalize your posts. If you believe your question is not useful or is no longer useful, it should be deleted instead of editing out all of the data that actually makes it a question. By posting on the Stack Exchange network, you've granted a non-revocable right for SE to distribute that content (under the CC BY-SA 3.0 license). By SE policy, any vandalism will be reverted.
    – Glorfindel
    Sep 23, 2018 at 17:31

1 Answer 1

1

The issue is that the default ToString() function just describes the class (in this case, System.Collections.Generic.List1[System.String]`). To get a string, you have override the string in some way, or convert the list contents to the string you're looking for.

I like to use string.Join() for this kind of situation.

public override string ToString()
{   
  var sb = new StringBuilder();    
  sb.Append("class IndexingPolicy {\n");    
  sb.Append(" AllowPrefixes: ").Append(
    string.Join(",", AllowPrefixes.ToList())
  ).Append("\n");

  sb.Append(" DenyPrefixes: ").Append(
    string.Join(",", DenyPrefixes.ToList())
  ).Append("\n");

  sb.Append(" DisableIndexing: ").Append(
    string.Join(","< DisableIndexing.ToList())
  ).Append("\n");

  sb.Append("}\n");

  return sb.ToString();
}

... and as a sidenote, I have found that using an array with string.Join is "cleaner" than using a stringbuilder, but just as performant.

public override string ToString()
{   
  var response = new List<string>() {
     "class IndexingPolicy {",
    $" AllowPrefixes: {string.Join(",", AllowPrefixes.ToList())}",   
    $" DenyPrefixes: {string.Join(",", DenyPrefixes.ToList())}",    
    $" DisableIndexing: {string.Join(",", DisableIndexing.ToList())}",
     "}",
     ""

  return string.Join(Environment.NewLine, response);
}

... and if use use an extension method for join:

public static string Join(this IEnumerable @this, string connector)
  => string.Join(connector, @this.ToList());

it gets even prettier:

public override string ToString()
{   
  var response = new List<string>() {
     "class IndexingPolicy {",
    $" AllowPrefixes: {AllowPrefixes.Join(",")}",   
    $" DenyPrefixes: {DenyPrefixes.Join(",")}",    
    $" DisableIndexing: {DisableIndexing.Join(",")}",
     "}",
     ""

  return string.Join(Environment.NewLine, response);
}
13
  • 1
    Fascinating how you could answer a question even tho it's not clear, you have a typo < should be a comma at the third Join()
    – user7148391
    May 15, 2018 at 18:38
  • 2
    @ZohirSalakCeNa the question is clear enough to be answered.
    – user47589
    May 15, 2018 at 18:40
  • Yeah, I fixed the typo. It's not obvious - but I've seen the output the OP is suffering from often enough to know exactly what the issue is. (I added to the top of my answer to give an explanation of what the problem is - which also explains how I was able to understand the original question).
    – theGleep
    May 15, 2018 at 18:40
  • 1
    Its a common issue. People expect a list's ToString() to output each item of the string, not realized it will use the default implementation from object.ToString() and simply spit out the class name.
    – user47589
    May 15, 2018 at 18:43
  • getting an An exception of type 'System.ArgumentNullException' occurred in System.Core.dll but was not handled in user code at the below line but in the output data is comming now sb.Append(" AllowPrefixes: ").Append( string.Join(",", AllowPrefixes.ToList()) ).Append("\n"); May 16, 2018 at 12:33

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