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ArrayList.Item[Int32] Eigenschaft

Definition

Ruft das Element am angegebenen Index ab oder legt dieses fest.

public:
 virtual property System::Object ^ default[int] { System::Object ^ get(int index); void set(int index, System::Object ^ value); };
public virtual object this[int index] { get; set; }
public virtual object? this[int index] { get; set; }
member this.Item(int) : obj with get, set
Default Public Overridable Property Item(index As Integer) As Object

Parameter

index
Int32

Der nullbasierte Index des Elements, das abgerufen oder festgelegt werden soll.

Eigenschaftswert

Das Element am angegebenen Index.

Implementiert

Ausnahmen

index ist kleiner als Null.

- oder -

index ist größer oder gleich Count.

Beispiele

Im folgenden Codebeispiel wird ein ArrayList erstellt und mehrere Elemente hinzugefügt. Das Beispiel veranschaulicht den Zugriff auf Elemente mit der Item[] -Eigenschaft (den Indexer in C#) und das Ändern eines Elements durch Zuweisen eines neuen Werts Item[] zur Eigenschaft für einen angegebenen Index. Das Beispiel zeigt auch, dass die Item[] -Eigenschaft nicht verwendet werden kann, um elemente außerhalb der aktuellen Größe der Liste zuzugreifen oder diese hinzuzufügen.

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;

public ref class Example
{
public:
    static void Main()
    {
        // Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        ArrayList^ stringList = gcnew ArrayList();

        stringList->Add("a");
        stringList->Add("abc");
        stringList->Add("abcdef");
        stringList->Add("abcdefg");

        // The Item property is an indexer, so the property name is
        // not required.
        Console::WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", 2, stringList[2]);

        // Assigning a value to the property changes the value of
        // the indexed element.
        stringList[2] = "abcd";
        Console::WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", 2, stringList[2]);

        // Accessing an element outside the current element count
        // causes an exception.
        Console::WriteLine("Number of elements in the list: {0}", 
            stringList->Count);
        try
        {
            Console::WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", 
                stringList->Count, stringList[stringList->Count]);
        }
        catch (ArgumentOutOfRangeException^ aoore)
        {
            Console::WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.", 
                stringList->Count);
        }

        // You cannot use the Item property to add new elements.
        try
        {
            stringList[stringList->Count] = "42";
        }
        catch (ArgumentOutOfRangeException^ aoore)
        {
            Console::WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.", 
                stringList->Count);
        }

        Console::WriteLine();
        for (int i = 0; i < stringList->Count; i++)
        {
            Console::WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", i, 
                stringList[i]);
        }

        Console::WriteLine();
        for each (Object^ o in stringList)
        {
            Console::WriteLine(o);
        }
    }
};

int main()
{
   Example::Main();
}
/*
 This code example produces the following output:

Element 2 is "abcdef"
Element 2 is "abcd"
Number of elements in the list: 4
stringList(4) is out of range.
stringList(4) is out of range.

Element 0 is "a"
Element 1 is "abc"
Element 2 is "abcd"
Element 3 is "abcdefg"

a
abc
abcd
abcdefg
 */
using System;
using System.Collections;

public class Example
{
    public static void Main()
    {
        // Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        ArrayList stringList = new ArrayList();

        stringList.Add("a");
        stringList.Add("abc");
        stringList.Add("abcdef");
        stringList.Add("abcdefg");

        // The Item property is an indexer, so the property name is
        // not required.
        Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", 2, stringList[2]);

        // Assigning a value to the property changes the value of
        // the indexed element.
        stringList[2] = "abcd";
        Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", 2, stringList[2]);

        // Accessing an element outside the current element count
        // causes an exception.
        Console.WriteLine("Number of elements in the list: {0}",
            stringList.Count);
        try
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"",
                stringList.Count, stringList[stringList.Count]);
        }
        catch(ArgumentOutOfRangeException aoore)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.",
                stringList.Count);
        }

        // You cannot use the Item property to add new elements.
        try
        {
            stringList[stringList.Count] = "42";
        }
        catch(ArgumentOutOfRangeException aoore)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.",
                stringList.Count);
        }

        Console.WriteLine();
        for (int i = 0; i < stringList.Count; i++)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is \"{1}\"", i,
                stringList[i]);
        }

        Console.WriteLine();
        foreach (object o in stringList)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(o);
        }
    }
}
/*
 This code example produces the following output:

Element 2 is "abcdef"
Element 2 is "abcd"
Number of elements in the list: 4
stringList(4) is out of range.
stringList(4) is out of range.

Element 0 is "a"
Element 1 is "abc"
Element 2 is "abcd"
Element 3 is "abcdefg"

a
abc
abcd
abcdefg
 */
Imports System.Collections

Public Class Example

    Public Shared Sub Main

        ' Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        Dim stringList As New ArrayList

        stringList.Add("a")
        stringList.Add("abc")
        stringList.Add("abcdef")
        stringList.Add("abcdefg")

        ' Item is the default property, so the property name is
        ' not required.
        Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is ""{1}""", 2, stringList(2))

        ' Assigning a value to the property changes the value of
        ' the indexed element.
        stringList(2) = "abcd"
        Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is ""{1}""", 2, stringList(2))

        ' Accessing an element outside the current element count
        ' causes an exception. The ArrayList index is zero-based,
        ' so the index of the last element is (Count - 1). 
        Console.WriteLine("Number of elements in the list: {0}", _
            stringList.Count)
        Try
            Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is ""{1}""", _
                stringList.Count, _
                stringList(stringList.Count))
        Catch aoore As ArgumentOutOfRangeException
            Console.WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.", _
                stringList.Count)
        End Try

        ' You cannot use the Item property to add new elements.
        Try
            stringList(stringList.Count) = "42"
        Catch aoore As ArgumentOutOfRangeException
            Console.WriteLine("stringList({0}) is out of range.", _
                stringList.Count)
        End Try

        Console.WriteLine()
        For i As Integer = 0 To stringList.Count - 1
            Console.WriteLine("Element {0} is ""{1}""", i, stringList(i))
        Next

        Console.WriteLine()
        For Each o As Object In stringList
            Console.WriteLine(o)
        Next

    End Sub

End Class
'
' This code example produces the following output:
'
'Element 2 is "abcdef"
'Element 2 is "abcd"
'Number of elements in the list: 4
'stringList(4) is out of range.
'stringList(4) is out of range.
'
'Element 0 is "a"
'Element 1 is "abc"
'Element 2 is "abcd"
'Element 3 is "abcdefg"
'
'a
'abc
'abcd
'abcdefg

Im folgenden Beispiel wird die Item[] -Eigenschaft explizit verwendet, um Elementen in der Liste Werte zuzuweisen. Im Beispiel wird eine Klasse definiert, die eine ArrayList erbt, und fügt eine Methode hinzu, um die Listenelemente zu durcheinander zu führen.

using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;

public ref class ScrambleList : public ArrayList
{
public:
    static void Main()
    {
        // Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        ScrambleList^ integerList = gcnew ScrambleList();

        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
        {
            integerList->Add(i);
        }

        Console::WriteLine("Ordered:\n");
        for each (int value in integerList)
        {
            Console::Write("{0}, ", value);
        }
        Console::WriteLine("<end>\n\nScrambled:\n");

        // Scramble the order of the items in the list.
        integerList->Scramble();

        for each (int value in integerList)
        {
            Console::Write("{0}, ", value);
        }
        Console::WriteLine("<end>\n");
    }

    void Scramble()
    {
        int limit = this->Count;
        int temp;
        int swapindex;
        Random^ rnd = gcnew Random();
        for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++)
        {
            // The Item property of ArrayList is the default indexer. Thus,
            // this->default[i] and this[i] are used interchangeably.
            temp = (int)this->default[i];
            swapindex = rnd->Next(0, limit - 1);
            this[i] = this->default[swapindex];
            this[swapindex] = temp;
        }
    }
};

int main()
{
    ScrambleList::Main();
}
// The program produces output similar to the following:
//
// Ordered:
//
// 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, <end>
//
// Scrambled:
//
// 5, 2, 8, 9, 6, 1, 7, 0, 4, 3, <end>
using System;
using System.Collections;

public class ScrambleList : ArrayList
{
    public static void Main()
    {
        // Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        ScrambleList integerList = new ScrambleList();

        for (int i = 0; i < 10; i++)
        {
            integerList.Add(i);
        }

        Console.WriteLine("Ordered:\n");
        foreach (int value in integerList)
        {
            Console.Write("{0}, ", value);
        }
        Console.WriteLine("<end>\n\nScrambled:\n");

        // Scramble the order of the items in the list.
        integerList.Scramble();

        foreach (int value in integerList)
        {
            Console.Write("{0}, ", value);
        }
        Console.WriteLine("<end>\n");
    }

    public void Scramble()
    {
        int limit = this.Count;
        int temp;
        int swapindex;
        Random rnd = new Random();
        for (int i = 0; i < limit; i++)
        {
            // The Item property of ArrayList is the default indexer. Thus,
            // this[i] is used instead of Item[i].
            temp = (int)this[i];
            swapindex = rnd.Next(0, limit - 1);
            this[i] = this[swapindex];
            this[swapindex] = temp;
        }
    }
}

// The program produces output similar to the following:
//
// Ordered:
//
// 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, <end>
//
// Scrambled:
//
// 5, 2, 8, 9, 6, 1, 7, 0, 4, 3, <end>
Imports System.Collections

Public Class ScrambleList
    Inherits ArrayList

    Public Shared Sub Main()
        ' Create an empty ArrayList, and add some elements.
        Dim integerList As New ScrambleList()

        For i As Integer = 0 To 9
            integerList.Add(i)
        Next i

        Console.WriteLine("Ordered:" + Environment.NewLine)
        For Each value As Integer In integerList
            Console.Write("{0}, ", value)
        Next value
        Console.WriteLine("<end>" + Environment.NewLine + Environment.NewLine + "Scrambled:" + Environment.NewLine)

        ' Scramble the order of the items in the list.
        integerList.Scramble()

        For Each value As Integer In integerList
            Console.Write("{0}, ", value)
        Next value
        Console.WriteLine("<end>" + Environment.NewLine)
    End Sub

    Public Sub Scramble()
        Dim limit As Integer = MyClass.Count
        Dim temp As Integer
        Dim swapindex As Integer
        Dim rnd As New Random()
        For i As Integer = 0 To limit - 1
            ' The Item property of ArrayList is the default indexer. Thus,
            ' Me(i) and MyClass.Item(i) are used interchangeably.
            temp = CType(Me(i), Integer)
            swapindex = rnd.Next(0, limit - 1)
            MyClass.Item(i) = Me(swapindex)
            MyClass.Item(swapindex) = temp
        Next i
    End Sub
End Class

' The program produces output similar to the following:
'
' Ordered:
'
' 0, 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, <end>
'
' Scrambled:
'
' 5, 2, 8, 9, 6, 1, 7, 0, 4, 3, <end>

Hinweise

Gibt Item[] einen Objectzurück, sodass Sie den zurückgegebenen Wert möglicherweise in den ursprünglichen Typ umwandeln müssen, um ihn zu bearbeiten. Es ist wichtig zu beachten, dass ArrayList keine stark typisierte Auflistung ist. Eine stark typisierte Alternative finden Sie unter List<T>.

ArrayList akzeptiert null als gültigen Wert und lässt doppelte Elemente zu.

Über diese Eigenschaft können Sie mithilfe der folgenden Syntax auf ein bestimmtes Element der Auflistung zugreifen: myCollection[index].

Die Programmiersprache C# verwendet für die Definition der Indexer das this-Schlüsselwort, anstatt die Item[]-Eigenschaft zu implementieren. Visual Basic implementiert Item[] als Standardeigenschaft und stellt auf diese Weise dieselbe Indizierungsfunktionalität bereit.

Das Abrufen des Werts dieser Eigenschaft ist ein O(1) Vorgang. Das Festlegen der Eigenschaft ist ebenfalls ein O(1) Vorgang.

Gilt für:

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