Array.BinarySearch Method
Definition
Important
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Searches a one-dimensional sorted Array for a value, using a binary search algorithm.
Overloads
BinarySearch(Array, Object) |
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a specific element, using the IComparable interface implemented by each element of the array and by the specified object. |
BinarySearch(Array, Object, IComparer) |
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a value using the specified IComparer interface. |
BinarySearch(Array, Int32, Int32, Object) |
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the IComparable interface implemented by each element of the array and by the specified value. |
BinarySearch(Array, Int32, Int32, Object, IComparer) |
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the specified IComparer interface. |
BinarySearch<T>(T[], T) |
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a specific element, using the IComparable<T> generic interface implemented by each element of the Array and by the specified object. |
BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>) |
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a value using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface. |
BinarySearch<T>(T[], Int32, Int32, T) |
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the IComparable<T> generic interface implemented by each element of the Array and by the specified value. |
BinarySearch<T>(T[], Int32, Int32, T, IComparer<T>) |
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface. |
BinarySearch(Array, Object)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a specific element, using the IComparable interface implemented by each element of the array and by the specified object.
public:
static int BinarySearch(Array ^ array, System::Object ^ value);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, object value);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, object? value);
static member BinarySearch : Array * obj -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch (array As Array, value As Object) As Integer
Parameters
- value
- Object
The object to search for.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
array
is multidimensional.
value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
value
does not implement the IComparable interface, and the search encounters an element that does not implement the IComparable interface.
Examples
The following code example shows how to use BinarySearch to locate a specific object in an Array.
Note
The array is created with its elements in ascending sort order. The BinarySearch method requires the array to be sorted in ascending order.
using namespace System;
public ref class SamplesArray
{
public:
static void Main()
{
// Creates and initializes a new Array.
Array^ myIntArray = Array::CreateInstance(Int32::typeid, 5);
myIntArray->SetValue(8, 0);
myIntArray->SetValue(2, 1);
myIntArray->SetValue(6, 2);
myIntArray->SetValue(3, 3);
myIntArray->SetValue(7, 4);
// Do the required sort first
Array::Sort(myIntArray);
// Displays the values of the Array.
Console::WriteLine("The Int32 array contains the following:");
PrintValues(myIntArray);
// Locates a specific object that does not exist in the Array.
Object^ myObjectOdd = 1;
FindMyObject(myIntArray, myObjectOdd);
// Locates an object that exists in the Array.
Object^ myObjectEven = 6;
FindMyObject(myIntArray, myObjectEven);
}
static void FindMyObject(Array^ myArr, Object^ myObject)
{
int myIndex = Array::BinarySearch(myArr, myObject);
if (myIndex < 0)
{
Console::WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is not found. The next larger object is at index {1}.", myObject, ~myIndex);
}
else
{
Console::WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is at index {1}.", myObject, myIndex);
}
}
static void PrintValues(Array^ myArr)
{
int i = 0;
int cols = myArr->GetLength(myArr->Rank - 1);
for each (Object^ o in myArr)
{
if ( i < cols )
{
i++;
}
else
{
Console::WriteLine();
i = 1;
}
Console::Write("\t{0}", o);
}
Console::WriteLine();
}
};
int main()
{
SamplesArray::Main();
}
// This code produces the following output.
//
//The Int32 array contains the following:
// 2 3 6 7 8
//The object to search for (1) is not found. The next larger object is at index 0
//
//The object to search for (6) is at index 2.
open System
let printValues (myArray: Array) =
let mutable i = 0
let cols = myArray.GetLength(myArray.Rank - 1)
for item in myArray do
if i < cols then
i <- i + 1
else
printfn ""
i <- 1;
printf $"\t{item}"
printfn ""
let findMyObject (myArr: Array) (myObject: obj) =
let myIndex = Array.BinarySearch(myArr, myObject)
if myIndex < 0 then
printfn $"The object to search for ({myObject}) is not found. The next larger object is at index {~~~myIndex}."
else
printfn $"The object to search for ({myObject}) is at index {myIndex}."
// Creates and initializes a new Array.
let myIntArray = [| 8; 2; 6; 3; 7 |]
// Do the required sort first
Array.Sort myIntArray
// Displays the values of the Array.
printfn "The int array contains the following:"
printValues myIntArray
// Locates a specific object that does not exist in the Array.
let myObjectOdd: obj = 1
findMyObject myIntArray myObjectOdd
// Locates an object that exists in the Array.
let myObjectEven: obj = 6
findMyObject myIntArray myObjectEven
// This code produces the following output:
// The int array contains the following:
// 2 3 6 7 8
// The object to search for (1) is not found. The next larger object is at index 0.
// The object to search for (6) is at index 2.
using System;
public class SamplesArray
{
public static void Main()
{
// Creates and initializes a new Array.
Array myIntArray = Array.CreateInstance(typeof(int), 5);
myIntArray.SetValue(8, 0);
myIntArray.SetValue(2, 1);
myIntArray.SetValue(6, 2);
myIntArray.SetValue(3, 3);
myIntArray.SetValue(7, 4);
// Do the required sort first
Array.Sort(myIntArray);
// Displays the values of the Array.
Console.WriteLine( "The int array contains the following:" );
PrintValues(myIntArray);
// Locates a specific object that does not exist in the Array.
object myObjectOdd = 1;
FindMyObject( myIntArray, myObjectOdd );
// Locates an object that exists in the Array.
object myObjectEven = 6;
FindMyObject(myIntArray, myObjectEven);
}
public static void FindMyObject(Array myArr, object myObject)
{
int myIndex=Array.BinarySearch(myArr, myObject);
if (myIndex < 0)
{
Console.WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is not found. The next larger object is at index {1}.", myObject, ~myIndex );
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is at index {1}.", myObject, myIndex );
}
}
public static void PrintValues(Array myArr)
{
int i = 0;
int cols = myArr.GetLength(myArr.Rank - 1);
foreach (object o in myArr)
{
if ( i < cols )
{
i++;
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine();
i = 1;
}
Console.Write( "\t{0}", o);
}
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
// This code produces the following output.
//
//The int array contains the following:
// 2 3 6 7 8
//The object to search for (1) is not found. The next larger object is at index 0
//
//The object to search for (6) is at index 2.
Public Class SamplesArray
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Creates and initializes a new Array.
Dim myIntArray As Array = Array.CreateInstance( GetType(Int32), 5 )
myIntArray.SetValue( 8, 0 )
myIntArray.SetValue( 2, 1 )
myIntArray.SetValue( 6, 2 )
myIntArray.SetValue( 3, 3 )
myIntArray.SetValue( 7, 4 )
' Do the required sort first
Array.Sort(myIntArray)
' Displays the values of the Array.
Console.WriteLine("The Int32 array contains the following:")
PrintValues(myIntArray)
' Locates a specific object that does not exist in the Array.
Dim myObjectOdd As Object = 1
FindMyObject(myIntArray, myObjectOdd)
' Locates an object that exists in the Array.
Dim myObjectEven As Object = 6
FindMyObject(myIntArray, myObjectEven)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub FindMyObject(myArr As Array, myObject As Object)
Dim myIndex As Integer = Array.BinarySearch(myArr, myObject)
If myIndex < 0 Then
Console.WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is not found. The next larger object is at index {1}.", myObject, Not(myIndex))
Else
Console.WriteLine("The object to search for ({0}) is at index {1}.", myObject, myIndex)
End If
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintValues(myArr As Array)
Dim i As Integer = 0
Dim cols As Integer = myArr.GetLength( myArr.Rank - 1 )
For Each o As Object In myArr
If i < cols Then
i += 1
Else
Console.WriteLine()
i = 1
End If
Console.Write( vbTab + "{0}", o)
Next o
Console.WriteLine()
End Sub
End Class
' This code produces the following output.
'
' The Int32 array contains the following:
' 2 3 6 7 8
' The object to search for (1) is not found. The next larger object is at index 0
'
' The object to search for (6) is at index 2.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the Array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is one greater than the upper bound of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
Either value
or every element of array
must implement the IComparable interface, which is used for comparisons. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Note
Ifvalue
does not implement the IComparable interface, the elements of array
are not tested for IComparable before the search begins. An exception is thrown if the search encounters an element that does not implement IComparable.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is the Length of array
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch(Array, Object, IComparer)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a value using the specified IComparer interface.
public:
static int BinarySearch(Array ^ array, System::Object ^ value, System::Collections::IComparer ^ comparer);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, object value, System.Collections.IComparer comparer);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, object? value, System.Collections.IComparer? comparer);
static member BinarySearch : Array * obj * System.Collections.IComparer -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch (array As Array, value As Object, comparer As IComparer) As Integer
Parameters
- value
- Object
The object to search for.
- comparer
- IComparer
The IComparer implementation to use when comparing elements.
-or-
null
to use the IComparable implementation of each element.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
array
is multidimensional.
comparer
is null
, and value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
comparer
is null
, value
does not implement the IComparable interface, and the search encounters an element that does not implement the IComparable interface.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the Array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is one greater than the upper bound of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
The comparer customizes how the elements are compared. For example, you can use a System.Collections.CaseInsensitiveComparer as the comparer to perform case-insensitive string searches.
If comparer
is not null
, the elements of array
are compared to the specified value using the specified IComparer implementation. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by comparer
; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Ifcomparer
is null
, the comparison is done using the IComparable implementation provided by the element itself or by the specified value. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Note
If comparer
is null
and value
does not implement the IComparable interface, the elements of array
are not tested for IComparable before the search begins. An exception is thrown if the search encounters an element that does not implement IComparable.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is the Length of array
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch(Array, Int32, Int32, Object)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the IComparable interface implemented by each element of the array and by the specified value.
public:
static int BinarySearch(Array ^ array, int index, int length, System::Object ^ value);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, int index, int length, object value);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, int index, int length, object? value);
static member BinarySearch : Array * int * int * obj -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch (array As Array, index As Integer, length As Integer, value As Object) As Integer
Parameters
- index
- Int32
The starting index of the range to search.
- length
- Int32
The length of the range to search.
- value
- Object
The object to search for.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
array
is multidimensional.
index
is less than the lower bound of array
.
-or-
length
is less than zero.
index
and length
do not specify a valid range in array
.
-or-
value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
value
does not implement the IComparable interface, and the search encounters an element that does not implement the IComparable interface.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the Array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is one greater than the upper bound of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
Either value
or every element of array
must implement the IComparable interface, which is used for comparisons. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Note
If value
does not implement the IComparable interface, the elements of array
are not tested for IComparable before the search begins. An exception is thrown if the search encounters an element that does not implement IComparable.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is length
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch(Array, Int32, Int32, Object, IComparer)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the specified IComparer interface.
public:
static int BinarySearch(Array ^ array, int index, int length, System::Object ^ value, System::Collections::IComparer ^ comparer);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, int index, int length, object value, System.Collections.IComparer comparer);
public static int BinarySearch (Array array, int index, int length, object? value, System.Collections.IComparer? comparer);
static member BinarySearch : Array * int * int * obj * System.Collections.IComparer -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch (array As Array, index As Integer, length As Integer, value As Object, comparer As IComparer) As Integer
Parameters
- index
- Int32
The starting index of the range to search.
- length
- Int32
The length of the range to search.
- value
- Object
The object to search for.
- comparer
- IComparer
The IComparer implementation to use when comparing elements.
-or-
null
to use the IComparable implementation of each element.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
array
is multidimensional.
index
is less than the lower bound of array
.
-or-
length
is less than zero.
index
and length
do not specify a valid range in array
.
-or-
comparer
is null
, and value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
comparer
is null
, value
does not implement the IComparable interface, and the search encounters an element that does not implement the IComparable interface.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the Array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is one greater than the upper bound of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
The comparer customizes how the elements are compared. For example, you can use a System.Collections.CaseInsensitiveComparer as the comparer to perform case-insensitive string searches.
If comparer
is not null
, the elements of array
are compared to the specified value using the specified IComparer implementation. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by comparer
; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
If comparer
is null
, the comparison is done using the IComparable implementation provided by the element itself or by the specified value. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Note
If comparer
is null
and value
does not implement the IComparable interface, the elements of array
are not tested for IComparable before the search begins. An exception is thrown if the search encounters an element that does not implement IComparable.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception when using IComparable.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is length
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch<T>(T[], T)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a specific element, using the IComparable<T> generic interface implemented by each element of the Array and by the specified object.
public:
generic <typename T>
static int BinarySearch(cli::array <T> ^ array, T value);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, T value);
static member BinarySearch : 'T[] * 'T -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch(Of T) (array As T(), value As T) As Integer
Type Parameters
- T
The type of the elements of the array.
Parameters
- array
- T[]
The sorted one-dimensional, zero-based Array to search.
- value
- T
The object to search for.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
T
does not implement the IComparable<T> generic interface.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates the Sort<T>(T[]) generic method overload and the BinarySearch<T>(T[], T) generic method overload. An array of strings is created, in no particular order.
The array is displayed, sorted, and displayed again. Arrays must be sorted in order to use the BinarySearch method.
Note
The calls to the Sort and BinarySearch generic methods do not look any different from calls to their nongeneric counterparts, because Visual Basic, F#, C#, and C++ infer the type of the generic type parameter from the type of the first argument. If you use the Ildasm.exe (IL Disassembler) to examine the Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL), you can see that the generic methods are being called.
The BinarySearch<T>(T[], T) generic method overload is then used to search for two strings, one that is not in the array and one that is. The array and the return value of the BinarySearch method are passed to the ShowWhere
generic method (the showWhere
function in the F# example), which displays the index value if the string is found, and otherwise the elements the search string would fall between if it were in the array. The index is negative if the string is not in the array, so the ShowWhere
method takes the bitwise complement (the ~ operator in C# and Visual C++, the ~~~ operator in F#, Xor
-1 in Visual Basic) to obtain the index of the first element in the list that is larger than the search string.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections::Generic;
generic<typename T> void ShowWhere(array<T>^ arr, int index)
{
if (index<0)
{
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
//
index = ~index;
Console::Write("Not found. Sorts between: ");
if (index == 0)
Console::Write("beginning of array and ");
else
Console::Write("{0} and ", arr[index-1]);
if (index == arr->Length)
Console::WriteLine("end of array.");
else
Console::WriteLine("{0}.", arr[index]);
}
else
{
Console::WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index);
}
};
void main()
{
array<String^>^ dinosaurs = {"Pachycephalosaurus",
"Amargasaurus",
"Tyrannosaurus",
"Mamenchisaurus",
"Deinonychus",
"Edmontosaurus"};
Console::WriteLine();
for each(String^ dinosaur in dinosaurs)
{
Console::WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console::WriteLine("\nSort");
Array::Sort(dinosaurs);
Console::WriteLine();
for each(String^ dinosaur in dinosaurs)
{
Console::WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console::WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':");
int index = Array::BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis");
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
Console::WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':");
index = Array::BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus");
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
}
/* This code example produces the following output:
Pachycephalosaurus
Amargasaurus
Tyrannosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Sort
Amargasaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Pachycephalosaurus
Tyrannosaurus
BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
Not found. Sorts between: Amargasaurus and Deinonychus.
BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
Found at index 5.
*/
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
string[] dinosaurs = {"Pachycephalosaurus",
"Amargasaurus",
"Tyrannosaurus",
"Mamenchisaurus",
"Deinonychus",
"Edmontosaurus"};
Console.WriteLine();
foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs )
{
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console.WriteLine("\nSort");
Array.Sort(dinosaurs);
Console.WriteLine();
foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs )
{
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console.WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':");
int index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis");
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
Console.WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':");
index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus");
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
}
private static void ShowWhere<T>(T[] array, int index)
{
if (index<0)
{
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
//
index = ~index;
Console.Write("Not found. Sorts between: ");
if (index == 0)
Console.Write("beginning of array and ");
else
Console.Write("{0} and ", array[index-1]);
if (index == array.Length)
Console.WriteLine("end of array.");
else
Console.WriteLine("{0}.", array[index]);
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index);
}
}
}
/* This code example produces the following output:
Pachycephalosaurus
Amargasaurus
Tyrannosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Sort
Amargasaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Pachycephalosaurus
Tyrannosaurus
BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
Not found. Sorts between: Amargasaurus and Deinonychus.
BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
Found at index 5.
*/
open System
let showWhere (array: 'a []) index =
if index < 0 then
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
let index = ~~~index
printf "Not found. Sorts between: "
if index = 0 then
printf "beginning of array and "
else
printf $"{array[index - 1]} and "
if index = array.Length then
printfn "end of array."
else
printfn $"{array[index]}."
else
printfn $"Found at index {index}."
let dinosaurs =
[| "Pachycephalosaurus"
"Amargasaurus"
"Tyrannosaurus"
"Mamenchisaurus"
"Deinonychus"
"Edmontosaurus" |]
printfn ""
for dino in dinosaurs do
printfn $"{dino}"
printfn "\nSort"
Array.Sort dinosaurs
printfn ""
for dino in dinosaurs do
printfn $"{dino}"
printfn "\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':"
let index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis")
showWhere dinosaurs index
printfn "\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':"
Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus")
|> showWhere dinosaurs
// This code example produces the following output:
//
// Pachycephalosaurus
// Amargasaurus
// Tyrannosaurus
// Mamenchisaurus
// Deinonychus
// Edmontosaurus
//
// Sort
//
// Amargasaurus
// Deinonychus
// Edmontosaurus
// Mamenchisaurus
// Pachycephalosaurus
// Tyrannosaurus
//
// BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
// Not found. Sorts between: Amargasaurus and Deinonychus.
//
// BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
// Found at index 5.
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim dinosaurs() As String = { _
"Pachycephalosaurus", _
"Amargasaurus", _
"Tyrannosaurus", _
"Mamenchisaurus", _
"Deinonychus", _
"Edmontosaurus" }
Console.WriteLine()
For Each dinosaur As String In dinosaurs
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur)
Next
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & "Sort")
Array.Sort(dinosaurs)
Console.WriteLine()
For Each dinosaur As String In dinosaurs
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur)
Next
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & _
"BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':")
Dim index As Integer = _
Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis")
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index)
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & _
"BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':")
index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus")
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index)
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ShowWhere(Of T) _
(ByVal array() As T, ByVal index As Integer)
If index < 0 Then
' If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
' complement of the next larger element in the array.
'
index = index Xor -1
Console.Write("Not found. Sorts between: ")
If index = 0 Then
Console.Write("beginning of array and ")
Else
Console.Write("{0} and ", array(index - 1))
End If
If index = array.Length Then
Console.WriteLine("end of array.")
Else
Console.WriteLine("{0}.", array(index))
End If
Else
Console.WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index)
End If
End Sub
End Class
' This code example produces the following output:
'
'Pachycephalosaurus
'Amargasaurus
'Tyrannosaurus
'Mamenchisaurus
'Deinonychus
'Edmontosaurus
'
'Sort
'
'Amargasaurus
'Deinonychus
'Edmontosaurus
'Mamenchisaurus
'Pachycephalosaurus
'Tyrannosaurus
'
'BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
'Not found. Sorts between: Amargasaurus and Deinonychus.
'
'BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
'Found at index 5.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If array
does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is equal to the size of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
T
must implement the IComparable<T> generic interface, which is used for comparisons. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable<T> implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable<T> implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable<T> implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is the Length of array
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches an entire one-dimensional sorted array for a value using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface.
public:
generic <typename T>
static int BinarySearch(cli::array <T> ^ array, T value, System::Collections::Generic::IComparer<T> ^ comparer);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, T value, System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<T> comparer);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, T value, System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<T>? comparer);
static member BinarySearch : 'T[] * 'T * System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<'T> -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch(Of T) (array As T(), value As T, comparer As IComparer(Of T)) As Integer
Type Parameters
- T
The type of the elements of the array.
Parameters
- array
- T[]
The sorted one-dimensional, zero-based Array to search.
- value
- T
The object to search for.
- comparer
- IComparer<T>
The IComparer<T> implementation to use when comparing elements.
-or-
null
to use the IComparable<T> implementation of each element.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
comparer
is null
, and value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
comparer
is null
, and T
does not implement the IComparable<T> generic interface
Examples
The following example demonstrates the Sort<T>(T[], IComparer<T>) generic method overload and the BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>) generic method overload.
The code example defines an alternative comparer for strings, named ReverseCompare
, which implements the IComparer<string>
(IComparer(Of String)
in Visual Basic, IComparer<String^>
in Visual C++) generic interface. The comparer calls the CompareTo(String) method, reversing the order of the comparands so that the strings sort high-to-low instead of low-to-high.
The array is displayed, sorted, and displayed again. Arrays must be sorted in order to use the BinarySearch method.
Note
The calls to the Sort<T>(T[], IComparer<T>) and BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>) generic methods do not look any different from calls to their nongeneric counterparts, because Visual Basic, C#, and C++ infer the type of the generic type parameter from the type of the first argument. If you use the Ildasm.exe (IL Disassembler) to examine the Microsoft intermediate language (MSIL), you can see that the generic methods are being called.
The BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>) generic method overload is then used to search for two strings, one that is not in the array and one that is. The array and the return value of the BinarySearch<T>(T[], T, IComparer<T>) method are passed to the ShowWhere
generic method (the showWhere
function in the F# example), which displays the index value if the string is found, and otherwise the elements the search string would fall between if it were in the array. The index is negative if the string is not n the array, so the ShowWhere
method takes the bitwise complement (the ~ operator in C# and Visual C++, the ~~~ operator in F#, Xor
-1 in Visual Basic) to obtain the index of the first element in the list that is larger than the search string.
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections::Generic;
public ref class ReverseComparer: IComparer<String^>
{
public:
virtual int Compare(String^ x, String^ y)
{
// Compare y and x in reverse order.
return y->CompareTo(x);
}
};
generic<typename T> void ShowWhere(array<T>^ arr, int index)
{
if (index<0)
{
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
//
index = ~index;
Console::Write("Not found. Sorts between: ");
if (index == 0)
Console::Write("beginning of array and ");
else
Console::Write("{0} and ", arr[index-1]);
if (index == arr->Length)
Console::WriteLine("end of array.");
else
Console::WriteLine("{0}.", arr[index]);
}
else
{
Console::WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index);
}
};
void main()
{
array<String^>^ dinosaurs = {"Pachycephalosaurus",
"Amargasaurus",
"Tyrannosaurus",
"Mamenchisaurus",
"Deinonychus",
"Edmontosaurus"};
Console::WriteLine();
for each(String^ dinosaur in dinosaurs)
{
Console::WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
ReverseComparer^ rc = gcnew ReverseComparer();
Console::WriteLine("\nSort");
Array::Sort(dinosaurs, rc);
Console::WriteLine();
for each(String^ dinosaur in dinosaurs)
{
Console::WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console::WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':");
int index = Array::BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis", rc);
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
Console::WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':");
index = Array::BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus", rc);
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
}
/* This code example produces the following output:
Pachycephalosaurus
Amargasaurus
Tyrannosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Sort
Tyrannosaurus
Pachycephalosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Edmontosaurus
Deinonychus
Amargasaurus
BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
Not found. Sorts between: Deinonychus and Amargasaurus.
BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
Found at index 0.
*/
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class ReverseComparer: IComparer<string>
{
public int Compare(string x, string y)
{
// Compare y and x in reverse order.
return y.CompareTo(x);
}
}
public class Example
{
public static void Main()
{
string[] dinosaurs = {"Pachycephalosaurus",
"Amargasaurus",
"Tyrannosaurus",
"Mamenchisaurus",
"Deinonychus",
"Edmontosaurus"};
Console.WriteLine();
foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs )
{
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
ReverseComparer rc = new ReverseComparer();
Console.WriteLine("\nSort");
Array.Sort(dinosaurs, rc);
Console.WriteLine();
foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs )
{
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur);
}
Console.WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':");
int index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis", rc);
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
Console.WriteLine("\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':");
index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus", rc);
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index);
}
private static void ShowWhere<T>(T[] array, int index)
{
if (index<0)
{
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
//
index = ~index;
Console.Write("Not found. Sorts between: ");
if (index == 0)
Console.Write("beginning of array and ");
else
Console.Write("{0} and ", array[index-1]);
if (index == array.Length)
Console.WriteLine("end of array.");
else
Console.WriteLine("{0}.", array[index]);
}
else
{
Console.WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index);
}
}
}
/* This code example produces the following output:
Pachycephalosaurus
Amargasaurus
Tyrannosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Deinonychus
Edmontosaurus
Sort
Tyrannosaurus
Pachycephalosaurus
Mamenchisaurus
Edmontosaurus
Deinonychus
Amargasaurus
BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
Not found. Sorts between: Deinonychus and Amargasaurus.
BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
Found at index 0.
*/
open System
open System.Collections.Generic
type ReverseComparer() =
interface IComparer<string> with
member _.Compare(x, y) =
// Compare y and x in reverse order.
y.CompareTo x
let showWhere (array: 'a []) index =
if index < 0 then
// If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
// complement of the next larger element in the array.
let index = ~~~index
printf "Not found. Sorts between: "
if index = 0 then
printf "beginning of array and "
else
printf $"{array[index - 1]} and "
if index = array.Length then
printfn "end of array."
else
printfn $"{array[index]}."
else
printfn $"Found at index {index}."
let dinosaurs =
[| "Pachycephalosaurus"
"Amargasaurus"
"Tyrannosaurus"
"Mamenchisaurus"
"Deinonychus"
"Edmontosaurus" |]
printfn ""
for dino in dinosaurs do
printfn $"{dino}"
let rc = ReverseComparer()
printfn "\nSort"
Array.Sort(dinosaurs, rc)
printfn ""
for dino in dinosaurs do
printfn $"{dino}"
printfn "\nBinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':"
Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis", rc)
|> showWhere dinosaurs
printfn "\nBinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':"
Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus", rc)
|> showWhere dinosaurs
// This code example produces the following output:
// Pachycephalosaurus
// Amargasaurus
// Tyrannosaurus
// Mamenchisaurus
// Deinonychus
// Edmontosaurus
//
// Sort
//
// Tyrannosaurus
// Pachycephalosaurus
// Mamenchisaurus
// Edmontosaurus
// Deinonychus
// Amargasaurus
//
// BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
// Not found. Sorts between: Deinonychus and Amargasaurus.
//
// BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
// Found at index 0.
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Public Class ReverseComparer
Implements IComparer(Of String)
Public Function Compare(ByVal x As String, _
ByVal y As String) As Integer _
Implements IComparer(Of String).Compare
' Compare y and x in reverse order.
Return y.CompareTo(x)
End Function
End Class
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Main()
Dim dinosaurs() As String = { _
"Pachycephalosaurus", _
"Amargasaurus", _
"Tyrannosaurus", _
"Mamenchisaurus", _
"Deinonychus", _
"Edmontosaurus" }
Console.WriteLine()
For Each dinosaur As String In dinosaurs
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur)
Next
Dim rc As New ReverseComparer()
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & "Sort")
Array.Sort(dinosaurs, rc)
Console.WriteLine()
For Each dinosaur As String In dinosaurs
Console.WriteLine(dinosaur)
Next
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & _
"BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':")
Dim index As Integer = _
Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Coelophysis", rc)
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index)
Console.WriteLine(vbLf & _
"BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':")
index = Array.BinarySearch(dinosaurs, "Tyrannosaurus", rc)
ShowWhere(dinosaurs, index)
End Sub
Private Shared Sub ShowWhere(Of T) _
(ByVal array() As T, ByVal index As Integer)
If index < 0 Then
' If the index is negative, it represents the bitwise
' complement of the next larger element in the array.
'
index = index Xor -1
Console.Write("Not found. Sorts between: ")
If index = 0 Then
Console.Write("beginning of array and ")
Else
Console.Write("{0} and ", array(index - 1))
End If
If index = array.Length Then
Console.WriteLine("end of array.")
Else
Console.WriteLine("{0}.", array(index))
End If
Else
Console.WriteLine("Found at index {0}.", index)
End If
End Sub
End Class
' This code example produces the following output:
'
'Pachycephalosaurus
'Amargasaurus
'Tyrannosaurus
'Mamenchisaurus
'Deinonychus
'Edmontosaurus
'
'Sort
'
'Tyrannosaurus
'Pachycephalosaurus
'Mamenchisaurus
'Edmontosaurus
'Deinonychus
'Amargasaurus
'
'BinarySearch for 'Coelophysis':
'Not found. Sorts between: Deinonychus and Amargasaurus.
'
'BinarySearch for 'Tyrannosaurus':
'Found at index 0.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the Array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is equal to the size of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
The comparer customizes how the elements are compared. For example, you can use a System.Collections.CaseInsensitiveComparer as the comparer to perform case-insensitive string searches.
If comparer
is not null
, the elements of array
are compared to the specified value using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface implementation. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by comparer
; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
If comparer
is null
, the comparison is done using the IComparable<T> generic interface implementation provided by T
. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable<T> implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Note
If comparer
is null
and value
does not implement the IComparable<T> generic interface, the elements of array
are not tested for IComparable<T> before the search begins. An exception is thrown if the search encounters an element that does not implement IComparable<T>.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable<T> implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable<T> implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is the Length of array
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch<T>(T[], Int32, Int32, T)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the IComparable<T> generic interface implemented by each element of the Array and by the specified value.
public:
generic <typename T>
static int BinarySearch(cli::array <T> ^ array, int index, int length, T value);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, int index, int length, T value);
static member BinarySearch : 'T[] * int * int * 'T -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch(Of T) (array As T(), index As Integer, length As Integer, value As T) As Integer
Type Parameters
- T
The type of the elements of the array.
Parameters
- array
- T[]
The sorted one-dimensional, zero-based Array to search.
- index
- Int32
The starting index of the range to search.
- length
- Int32
The length of the range to search.
- value
- T
The object to search for.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
index
is less than the lower bound of array
.
-or-
length
is less than zero.
index
and length
do not specify a valid range in array
.
-or-
value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
T
does not implement the IComparable<T> generic interface.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is equal to the size of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
T
must implement the IComparable<T> generic interface, which is used for comparisons. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable<T> implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable<T> implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable<T> implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is length
.
See also
Applies to
BinarySearch<T>(T[], Int32, Int32, T, IComparer<T>)
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
- Source:
- Array.cs
Searches a range of elements in a one-dimensional sorted array for a value, using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface.
public:
generic <typename T>
static int BinarySearch(cli::array <T> ^ array, int index, int length, T value, System::Collections::Generic::IComparer<T> ^ comparer);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, int index, int length, T value, System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<T> comparer);
public static int BinarySearch<T> (T[] array, int index, int length, T value, System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<T>? comparer);
static member BinarySearch : 'T[] * int * int * 'T * System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<'T> -> int
Public Shared Function BinarySearch(Of T) (array As T(), index As Integer, length As Integer, value As T, comparer As IComparer(Of T)) As Integer
Type Parameters
- T
The type of the elements of the array.
Parameters
- array
- T[]
The sorted one-dimensional, zero-based Array to search.
- index
- Int32
The starting index of the range to search.
- length
- Int32
The length of the range to search.
- value
- T
The object to search for.
- comparer
- IComparer<T>
The IComparer<T> implementation to use when comparing elements.
-or-
null
to use the IComparable<T> implementation of each element.
Returns
The index of the specified value
in the specified array
, if value
is found; otherwise, a negative number. If value
is not found and value
is less than one or more elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of the index of the first element that is larger than value
. If value
is not found and value
is greater than all elements in array
, the negative number returned is the bitwise complement of (the index of the last element plus 1). If this method is called with a non-sorted array
, the return value can be incorrect and a negative number could be returned, even if value
is present in array
.
Exceptions
array
is null
.
index
is less than the lower bound of array
.
-or-
length
is less than zero.
index
and length
do not specify a valid range in array
.
-or-
comparer
is null
, and value
is of a type that is not compatible with the elements of array
.
comparer
is null
, and T
does not implement the IComparable<T> generic interface.
Remarks
This method does not support searching arrays that contain negative indexes. array
must be sorted before calling this method.
If the array does not contain the specified value, the method returns a negative integer. You can apply the bitwise complement operator (~ in C#, Not
in Visual Basic) to the negative result to produce an index. If this index is equal to the size of the array, there are no elements larger than value
in the array. Otherwise, it is the index of the first element that is larger than value
.
The comparer customizes how the elements are compared. For example, you can use a System.Collections.CaseInsensitiveComparer as the comparer to perform case-insensitive string searches.
If comparer
is not null
, the elements of array
are compared to the specified value using the specified IComparer<T> generic interface implementation. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by comparer
; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
If comparer
is null
, the comparison is done using the IComparable<T> generic interface implementation provided for type T
. The elements of array
must already be sorted in increasing value according to the sort order defined by the IComparable<T> implementation; otherwise, the result might be incorrect.
Duplicate elements are allowed. If the Array contains more than one element equal to value
, the method returns the index of only one of the occurrences, and not necessarily the first one.
null
can always be compared with any other reference type; therefore, comparisons with null
do not generate an exception when using IComparable<T>.
Note
For every element tested, value
is passed to the appropriate IComparable<T> implementation, even if value
is null
. That is, the IComparable<T> implementation determines how a given element compares to null
.
This method is an O(log n
) operation, where n
is length
.