| |||||
Object.Equals MethodDetermines whether two Object instances are equal. Overload List1. Determines whether the specified Object is equal to the current Object. Determines whether the specified Object instances are considered equal. Example[ C#, JScript ] The following code example compares different objects. [ C#, JScript ] Note This example shows how to use one of the overloaded versions of Equals. For other examples that might be available, see the individual overload topics.[ C# ] using System; public class MyClass { public static void Main ( ) { string s1 = "Tom"; string s2 = "Carol"; Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( \"{0}\", \"{1}\" ) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ) ); s1 = "Tom"; s2 = "Tom"; Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( \"{0}\", \"{1}\" ) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ) ); s1 = null; s2 = "Tom"; Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( null, \"{1}\" ) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ) ); s1 = "Carol"; s2 = null; Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( \"{0}\", null ) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ) ); s1 = null; s2 = null; Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( null, null ) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ) ); } } /* This code produces the following output. Object.Equals ( "Tom", "Carol" ) => False Object.Equals ( "Tom", "Tom" ) => True Object.Equals ( null, "Tom" ) => False Object.Equals ( "Carol", null ) => False Object.Equals ( null, null ) => True */ [ JScript ] import System package Equals0 { public class MyClass { public static function Main ( ) { var s1 : String = "Tom"; var s2 : String = "Carol"; var array : Object [ ] = new Object [ 3 ]; array [ 0 ] = s1; array [ 1 ] = s2; array [ 2 ] = System.Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ); Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( '{0}', '{1}' ) => {2}", array ); s1 = "Tom"; s2 = "Tom"; array [ 0 ] = s1; array [ 1 ] = s2; array [ 2 ] = System.Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ); Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( '{0}', '{1}' ) => {2}", array ); s1 = null; s2 = "Tom"; array [ 0 ] = s1; array [ 1 ] = s2; array [ 2 ] = System.Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ); Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( null, '{1}' ) => {2}", array ); s1 = "Carol"; s2 = null; array [ 0 ] = s1; array [ 1 ] = s2; array [ 2 ] = System.Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ); Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( '{0}', null ) => {2}", array ); s1 = null; s2 = null; array [ 0 ] = s1; array [ 1 ] = s2; array [ 2 ] = System.Object.Equals ( s1, s2 ); Response.Write ( "Object.Equals ( null, null ) => {2}", array ); } } } Equals0.MyClass.Main ( ); /* This code produces the following output. Object.Equals ( "Tom", "Carol" ) => False Object.Equals ( "Tom", "Tom" ) => True Object.Equals ( null, "Tom" ) => False Object.Equals ( "Carol", null ) => False Object.Equals ( null, null ) => True */ See Also |
| ||||
Check out related books at Amazon
© 2000-2008 Rey Nuñez All rights reserved.
If you have any question, comment or suggestion
about this site, please send us a note
You can help support aspxtreme