Performing Culture-Insensitive String Operations in Collections
There are classes and members in the System.Collections namespace that provide culture-sensitive behavior by default. The default constructors for the CaseInsensitiveComparer and CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider classes initialize a new instance using the Thread.CurrentCulture property. All overloads of the CollectionsUtil.CreateCaseInsensitiveHashTable method create a new instance of the Hashtable class using the Thread.CurrentCulture property by default. Overloads of the ArrayList.Sort method perform culture-sensitive sorts by default using Thread.CurrentCulture. Sorting and lookup in a SortedList can be affected by Thread.CurrentCulture when strings are used as the keys. Follow the usage recommendations provided in this section to obtain culture-insensitive results from these classes and methods in the Collections namespace.
Using the CaseInsensitiveComparer and CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider Classes
The default constructors for CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider and CaseInsensitiveComparer initialize a new instance of the class using the Thread.CurrentCulture, resulting in culture-sensitive behavior. The following code example demonstrates the constructor for a Hashtable that is culture-sensitive because it uses the default constructors for CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider and CaseInsensitiveComparer.
internalHashtable = New Hashtable(CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider.Default, CaseInsensitiveComparer.Default)
internalHashtable = new Hashtable(CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider.Default, CaseInsensitiveComparer.Default);
If you want to create a culture-insensitive Hashtable using the CaseInsensitiveComparer and CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider classes, initialize new instances of these classes using the constructors that accept a culture parameter. For the culture parameter, specify CultureInfo.InvariantCulture. The following code example demonstrates the constructor for a culture-insensitive Hashtable.
internalHashtable = New Hashtable(New
CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture),
New CaseInsensitiveComparer(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture))
internalHashtable = new Hashtable(new CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider
(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture),
new CaseInsensitiveComparer(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));
Using the CollectionsUtil.CreateCaseInsensitiveHashTable Method
The CollectionsUtil.CreateCaseInsensitiveHashTable method is a useful shortcut for creating a new instance of the Hashtable class that ignores the case of strings. However, all overloads of the CollectionsUtil.CreateCaseInsensitiveHashTable method are culture-sensitive because they use the Thread.CurrentCulture property. You cannot create a culture-insensitive Hashtable using this method. To create a culture-insensitive Hashtable, use the Hashtable constructor that accepts a culture parameter. For the culture parameter, specify CultureInfo.InvariantCulture. The following code example demonstrates the constructor for a culture-insensitive Hashtable.
internalHashtable = New Hashtable(New
CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture),
New CaseInsensitiveComparer(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture))
internalHashtable = new Hashtable(new CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider
(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture),
new CaseInsensitiveComparer(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture));
Using the SortedList Class
A SortedList represents a collection of key-and-value pairs that are sorted by the keys and are accessible by key and by index. When you use a SortedList where strings are the keys, the sorting and lookup can be affected by the Thread.CurrentCulture property. To obtain culture-insensitive behavior from a SortedList, create a SortedList using one of the constructors that accepts a comparer parameter. The comparer parameter specifies the IComparer implementation to use when comparing keys. For the IComparer parameter, specify a custom comparer class that uses CultureInfo.InvariantCulture to compare keys. The following example illustrates a custom culture-insensitive comparer class that you can specify as the IComparer parameter to a SortedList constructor.
Imports System
Imports System.Collections
Imports System.Globalization
Friend Class InvariantComparer
Implements IComparer
Private m_compareInfo As CompareInfo
Friend Shared [Default] As New InvariantComparer()
Friend Sub New()
m_compareInfo = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.CompareInfo
End Sub
Public Function Compare(a As Object, b As Object) As Integer _
Implements IComparer.Compare
Dim sa As String = CType(a, String)
Dim sb As String = CType(b, String)
If Not (sa Is Nothing) And Not (sb Is Nothing) Then
Return m_compareInfo.Compare(sa, sb)
Else
Return Comparer.Default.Compare(a, b)
End If
End Function
End Class
using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.Globalization;
internal class InvariantComparer : IComparer
{
private CompareInfo m_compareInfo;
internal static readonly InvariantComparer Default = new
InvariantComparer();
internal InvariantComparer()
{
m_compareInfo = CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.CompareInfo;
}
public int Compare(Object a, Object b)
{
String sa = a as String;
String sb = b as String;
if (sa != null && sb != null)
return m_compareInfo.Compare(sa, sb);
else
return Comparer.Default.Compare(a,b);
}
}
In general, if you use a SortedList on strings without specifying a custom invariant comparer, a change to Thread.CurrentCulture after the list has been populated can invalidate the list.
Using the ArrayList.Sort Method
Overloads of the ArrayList.Sort method perform culture-sensitive sorts by default using the Thread.CurrentCulture property. Results can vary by culture due to different sort orders. To eliminate culture-sensitive behavior, use the overloads of this method that accept an IComparer parameter. For the IComparer parameter, specify a custom invariant comparer class that uses CultureInfo.InvariantCulture. An example of a custom invariant comparer class is provided in the Using the SortedList Class topic.
See Also
Reference
CaseInsensitiveHashCodeProvider
CollectionsUtil.CreateCaseInsensitiveHashTable Method