CA2224: Override Equals on overloading operator equals
Property | Value |
---|---|
Rule ID | CA2224 |
Title | Override Equals on overloading operator equals |
Category | Usage |
Fix is breaking or non-breaking | Non-breaking |
Enabled by default in .NET 9 | As suggestion |
Cause
A public type implements the equality operator but doesn't override System.Object.Equals.
Rule description
The equality operator is intended to be a syntactically convenient way to access the functionality of the Equals method. If you implement the equality operator, its logic must be identical to that of Equals.
Note
This rule only applies to Visual Basic code. The C# compiler generates a separate warning, CS0660.
How to fix violations
To fix a violation of this rule, you should either remove the implementation of the equality operator, or override Equals and have the two methods return the same values. If the equality operator does not introduce inconsistent behavior, you can fix the violation by providing an implementation of Equals that calls the Equals method in the base class.
When to suppress warnings
It is safe to suppress a warning from this rule if the equality operator returns the same value as the inherited implementation of Equals. The examples in this article include a type that could safely suppress a warning from this rule.
Suppress a warning
If you just want to suppress a single violation, add preprocessor directives to your source file to disable and then re-enable the rule.
#pragma warning disable CA2224
// The code that's violating the rule is on this line.
#pragma warning restore CA2224
To disable the rule for a file, folder, or project, set its severity to none
in the configuration file.
[*.{cs,vb}]
dotnet_diagnostic.CA2224.severity = none
For more information, see How to suppress code analysis warnings.
Example
The following example shows a class (reference type) that violates this rule.
' This class violates the rule.
Public Class Point
Public Property X As Integer
Public Property Y As Integer
Public Sub New(x As Integer, y As Integer)
Me.X = x
Me.Y = y
End Sub
Public Overrides Function GetHashCode() As Integer
Return HashCode.Combine(X, Y)
End Function
Public Shared Operator =(pt1 As Point, pt2 As Point) As Boolean
If pt1 Is Nothing OrElse pt2 Is Nothing Then
Return False
End If
If pt1.GetType() <> pt2.GetType() Then
Return False
End If
Return pt1.X = pt2.X AndAlso pt1.Y = pt2.Y
End Operator
Public Shared Operator <>(pt1 As Point, pt2 As Point) As Boolean
Return Not pt1 = pt2
End Operator
End Class
The following example fixes the violation by overriding System.Object.Equals.
' This class satisfies the rule.
Public Class Point
Public Property X As Integer
Public Property Y As Integer
Public Sub New(x As Integer, y As Integer)
Me.X = x
Me.Y = y
End Sub
Public Overrides Function GetHashCode() As Integer
Return HashCode.Combine(X, Y)
End Function
Public Overrides Function Equals(obj As Object) As Boolean
If obj = Nothing Then
Return False
End If
If [GetType]() <> obj.GetType() Then
Return False
End If
Dim pt As Point = CType(obj, Point)
Return X = pt.X AndAlso Y = pt.Y
End Function
Public Shared Operator =(pt1 As Point, pt2 As Point) As Boolean
' Object.Equals calls Point.Equals(Object).
Return Object.Equals(pt1, pt2)
End Operator
Public Shared Operator <>(pt1 As Point, pt2 As Point) As Boolean
' Object.Equals calls Point.Equals(Object).
Return Not Object.Equals(pt1, pt2)
End Operator
End Class
Related rules
- CA1046: Do not overload operator equals on reference types
- CA2218: Override GetHashCode on overriding Equals
- CA2225: Operator overloads have named alternates
- CA2226: Operators should have symmetrical overloads
- CA2231: Overload operator equals on overriding ValueType.Equals