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Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4>.IStructuralComparable.CompareTo Method

Definition

Compares the current Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4> object to a specified object by using a specified comparer and returns an integer that indicates whether the current object is before, after, or in the same position as the specified object in the sort order.

int IStructuralComparable.CompareTo (object other, System.Collections.IComparer comparer);

Parameters

other
Object

An object to compare with the current instance.

comparer
IComparer

An object that provides custom rules for comparison.

Returns

A signed integer that indicates the relative position of this instance and other in the sort order, as shown in the following table.

Value Description
A negative integer This instance precedes other.
Zero This instance and other have the same position in the sort order.
A positive integer This instance follows other.

Implements

Exceptions

other is not a Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4> object.

Examples

The following example creates an array of Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4> objects that contain statistical data about baseball pitchers. The data items include the name of the pitcher, the number of innings pitched, the pitcher's earned run average (the average number of runs a pitcher allows per game), and the number of hits the pitcher has given up. The example displays the component of each tuple in the array in unsorted order, sorts the array, and then calls ToString to display the value of each tuple in sorted order. To sort the array, the example defines a generic PitcherComparer class that implements the IComparer interface and sorts the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4> objects in ascending order by the value of their third component (the earned run average) rather than their first component. Note that the example does not directly call the IStructuralComparable.CompareTo(Object, IComparer) method. This method is called implicitly by the Array.Sort(Array, IComparer) method for each element in the array.

using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Collections.Generic;

public class PitcherComparer<T1, T2, T3, T4> : IComparer
{
   public int Compare(object x, object y)
   {
      Tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4> tX = x as Tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4>;
      if (tX == null)
      { 
         return 0;
      }   
      else
      {
         Tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4> tY = y as Tuple<T1, T2, T3, T4>;
         return Comparer<T3>.Default.Compare(tX.Item3, tY.Item3);             
      }
   }
}

public class Example
{
   public static void Main()
   {
      Tuple<string, double, double, int>[] pitchers = 
                    { Tuple.Create("McHale, Joe", 240.1, 3.60, 221),
                      Tuple.Create("Paul, Dave", 233.1, 3.24, 231), 
                      Tuple.Create("Williams, Mike", 193.2, 4.00, 183),
                      Tuple.Create("Blair, Jack", 168.1, 3.48, 146), 
                      Tuple.Create("Henry, Walt", 140.1, 1.92, 96),
                      Tuple.Create("Lee, Adam", 137.2, 2.94, 109),
                      Tuple.Create("Rohr, Don", 101.0, 3.74, 110) };

      Console.WriteLine("The values in unsorted order:");
      foreach (var pitcher in pitchers)
         Console.WriteLine(pitcher.ToString());

      Console.WriteLine();

      Array.Sort(pitchers, new PitcherComparer<string, double, double, int>());

      Console.WriteLine("The values sorted by earned run average (component 3):");
      foreach (var pitcher in pitchers)
         Console.WriteLine(pitcher.ToString());
   }
}
// The example displays the following output;
//       The values in unsorted order:
//       (McHale, Joe, 240.1, 3.6, 221)
//       (Paul, Dave, 233.1, 3.24, 231)
//       (Williams, Mike, 193.2, 4, 183)
//       (Blair, Jack, 168.1, 3.48, 146)
//       (Henry, Walt, 140.1, 1.92, 96)
//       (Lee, Adam, 137.2, 2.94, 109)
//       (Rohr, Don, 101, 3.74, 110)
//       
//       The values sorted by earned run average (component 3):
//       (Henry, Walt, 140.1, 1.92, 96)
//       (Lee, Adam, 137.2, 2.94, 109)
//       (Rohr, Don, 101, 3.74, 110)
//       (Blair, Jack, 168.1, 3.48, 146)
//       (McHale, Joe, 240.1, 3.6, 221)
//       (Paul, Dave, 233.1, 3.24, 231)
//       (Williams, Mike, 193.2, 4, 183)

Remarks

This member is an explicit interface member implementation. It can be used only when the Tuple<T1,T2,T3,T4> instance is cast to an IStructuralComparable interface.

Although this method can be called directly, it is most commonly called by collection sorting methods that include IComparer parameters to order the members of a collection. For example, it is called by the Array.Sort(Array, IComparer) method and the Add method of a SortedList object that is instantiated by using the SortedList.SortedList(IComparer) constructor.

Attention

The IStructuralComparable.CompareTo(Object, IComparer) method is intended for use in sorting operations. It should not be used when the primary purpose of a comparison is to determine whether two objects are equal. To determine whether two objects are equal, call the IStructuralEquatable.Equals(Object, IEqualityComparer) method.

Applies to