Rediger

Del via


Hashtable.CopyTo(Array, Int32) Method

Definition

Copies the Hashtable elements to a one-dimensional Array instance at the specified index.

public:
 virtual void CopyTo(Array ^ array, int arrayIndex);
public virtual void CopyTo (Array array, int arrayIndex);
abstract member CopyTo : Array * int -> unit
override this.CopyTo : Array * int -> unit
Public Overridable Sub CopyTo (array As Array, arrayIndex As Integer)

Parameters

array
Array

The one-dimensional Array that is the destination of the DictionaryEntry objects copied from Hashtable. The Array must have zero-based indexing.

arrayIndex
Int32

The zero-based index in array at which copying begins.

Implements

Exceptions

array is null.

arrayIndex is less than zero.

array is multidimensional.

-or-

The number of elements in the source Hashtable is greater than the available space from arrayIndex to the end of the destination array.

The type of the source Hashtable cannot be cast automatically to the type of the destination array.

Examples

The following example shows how to copy the list of keys or the list of values in a Hashtable into a one-dimensional Array.

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;
void PrintValues( array<String^>^myArr, char mySeparator );
int main()
{
   
   // Creates and initializes the source Hashtable.
   Hashtable^ mySourceHT = gcnew Hashtable;
   mySourceHT->Add( "A", "valueA" );
   mySourceHT->Add( "B", "valueB" );
   
   // Creates and initializes the one-dimensional target Array.
   array<String^>^myTargetArray = gcnew array<String^>(15);
   myTargetArray[ 0 ] = "The";
   myTargetArray[ 1 ] = "quick";
   myTargetArray[ 2 ] = "brown";
   myTargetArray[ 3 ] = "fox";
   myTargetArray[ 4 ] = "jumps";
   myTargetArray[ 5 ] = "over";
   myTargetArray[ 6 ] = "the";
   myTargetArray[ 7 ] = "lazy";
   myTargetArray[ 8 ] = "dog";
   
   // Displays the values of the target Array.
   Console::WriteLine( "The target Array contains the following before:" );
   PrintValues( myTargetArray, ' ' );
   
   // Copies the keys in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
   Console::WriteLine( "After copying the keys, starting at index 6:" );
   mySourceHT->Keys->CopyTo( myTargetArray, 6 );
   
   // Displays the values of the target Array.
   PrintValues( myTargetArray, ' ' );
   
   // Copies the values in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
   Console::WriteLine( "After copying the values, starting at index 6:" );
   mySourceHT->Values->CopyTo( myTargetArray, 6 );
   
   // Displays the values of the target Array.
   PrintValues( myTargetArray, ' ' );
}

void PrintValues( array<String^>^myArr, char mySeparator )
{
   for ( int i = 0; i < myArr->Length; i++ )
      Console::Write( "{0}{1}", mySeparator, myArr[ i ] );
   Console::WriteLine();
}

/* 
 This code produces the following output.
 
 The target Array contains the following before:
  The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
 After copying the keys, starting at index 6:
  The quick brown fox jumps over B A dog
 After copying the values, starting at index 6:
  The quick brown fox jumps over valueB valueA dog

 */
using System;
using System.Collections;
public class SamplesHashtable
{

   public static void Main()
   {
      // Creates and initializes the source Hashtable.
      var mySourceHT = new Hashtable();
      mySourceHT.Add("A", "valueA");
      mySourceHT.Add("B", "valueB");

      // Creates and initializes the one-dimensional target Array.
      var myTargetArray = new String[15];
      myTargetArray[0] = "The";
      myTargetArray[1] = "quick";
      myTargetArray[2] = "brown";
      myTargetArray[3] = "fox";
      myTargetArray[4] = "jumps";
      myTargetArray[5] = "over";
      myTargetArray[6] = "the";
      myTargetArray[7] = "lazy";
      myTargetArray[8] = "dog";

      // Displays the values of the target Array.
      Console.WriteLine("The target Array contains the following before:");
      PrintValues(myTargetArray, ' ');

      // Copies the keys in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
      Console.WriteLine("After copying the keys, starting at index 6:");
      mySourceHT.Keys.CopyTo(myTargetArray, 6);

      // Displays the values of the target Array.
      PrintValues(myTargetArray, ' ');

      // Copies the values in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
      Console.WriteLine("After copying the values, starting at index 6:");
      mySourceHT.Values.CopyTo(myTargetArray, 6);

      // Displays the values of the target Array.
      PrintValues(myTargetArray, ' ');
   }

   public static void PrintValues(String[] myArr, char mySeparator)
   {
      for (int i = 0; i < myArr.Length; i++)
         Console.Write($"{mySeparator}{myArr[i]}");
      Console.WriteLine();
   }
}
/*
This code produces the following output.

The target Array contains the following before:
 The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
After copying the keys, starting at index 6:
 The quick brown fox jumps over B A dog
After copying the values, starting at index 6:
 The quick brown fox jumps over valueB valueA dog

*/
Imports System.Collections

Public Class SamplesHashtable

    Public Shared Sub Main()

        ' Creates and initializes the source Hashtable.
        Dim mySourceHT As New Hashtable()
        mySourceHT.Add("A", "valueA")
        mySourceHT.Add("B", "valueB")

        ' Creates and initializes the one-dimensional target Array.
        Dim myTargetArray(14) As String
        myTargetArray(0) = "The"
        myTargetArray(1) = "quick"
        myTargetArray(2) = "brown"
        myTargetArray(3) = "fox"
        myTargetArray(4) = "jumps"
        myTargetArray(5) = "over"
        myTargetArray(6) = "the"
        myTargetArray(7) = "lazy"
        myTargetArray(8) = "dog"

        ' Displays the values of the target Array.
        Console.WriteLine("The target Array contains the following before:")
        PrintValues(myTargetArray, " "c)

        ' Copies the keys in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
        Console.WriteLine("After copying the keys, starting at index 6:")
        mySourceHT.Keys.CopyTo(myTargetArray, 6)

        ' Displays the values of the target Array.
        PrintValues(myTargetArray, " "c)

        ' Copies the values in the source Hashtable to the target Hashtable, starting at index 6.
        Console.WriteLine("After copying the values, starting at index 6:")
        mySourceHT.Values.CopyTo(myTargetArray, 6)

        ' Displays the values of the target Array.
        PrintValues(myTargetArray, " "c)

    End Sub

    Public Shared Sub PrintValues(myArr As String(), mySeparator As Char)
        For i As Integer = 0 To myArr.Length - 1
            Console.Write($"{mySeparator}{myArr(i)}")
        Next i
        Console.WriteLine()
    End Sub

End Class


' This code produces the following output.
' 
' The target Array contains the following before:
'  The quick brown fox jumps over the lazy dog
' After copying the keys, starting at index 6:
'  The quick brown fox jumps over A B dog
' After copying the values, starting at index 6:
'  The quick brown fox jumps over valueA valueB dog

Remarks

The elements are copied to the Array in the same order in which the enumerator iterates through the Hashtable.

To copy only the keys in the Hashtable, use Hashtable.Keys.CopyTo.

To copy only the values in the Hashtable, use Hashtable.Values.CopyTo.

This method is an O(n) operation, where n is Count.

Applies to

See also