Marshal.Copy Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Copies data from a managed array to an unmanaged memory pointer, or from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed array.
Overloads
Copy(Single[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed single-precision floating-point number array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(IntPtr, Single[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed single-precision floating-point number array. |
Copy(IntPtr, IntPtr[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed IntPtr array. |
Copy(IntPtr, Int64[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 64-bit signed integer array. |
Copy(IntPtr, Int32[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 32-bit signed integer array. |
Copy(IntPtr, Int16[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 16-bit signed integer array. |
Copy(IntPtr, Double[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed double-precision floating-point number array. |
Copy(IntPtr[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed IntPtr array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(IntPtr, Byte[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 8-bit unsigned integer array. |
Copy(Int64[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 64-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(Int32[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 32-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(Int16[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 16-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(Double[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed double-precision floating-point number array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(Char[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed character array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(IntPtr, Char[], Int32, Int32) |
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed character array. |
Copy(Byte[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) |
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 8-bit unsigned integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer. |
Copy(Single[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed single-precision floating-point number array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <float> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (float[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (float[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : single[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : single[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Single(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Single[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
source
, startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Single[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed single-precision floating-point number array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <float> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, float[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, float[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * single[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * single[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Single(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Single[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, IntPtr[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed IntPtr array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <IntPtr> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, IntPtr[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, IntPtr[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * nativeint[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * nativeint[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As IntPtr(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
-
IntPtr[]
nativeint[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Therefore, the unmanaged data that corresponds to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling the Marshal.Copy method.
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Int64[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 64-bit signed integer array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <long> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, long[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, long[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * int64[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * int64[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Long(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Int64[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
Int64[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Int64[] managedArray2 = new Int64[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Int64() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Int64
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to thesource
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Int32[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 32-bit signed integer array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <int> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, int[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, int[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * int[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * int[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Integer(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Int32[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
int[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
int[] managedArray2 = new int[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Integer() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Integer
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Int16[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 16-bit signed integer array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <short> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, short[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, short[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * int16[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * int16[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Short(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Int16[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
short[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
short[] managedArray2 = new short[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Short() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Short
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Double[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed double-precision floating-point number array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <double> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, double[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, double[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * double[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * double[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Double(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Double[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
double[] managedArray = { 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
double[] managedArray2 = new double[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Double() = {0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Double
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed IntPtr array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <IntPtr> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr[]
nativeint[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed IntPtr array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Byte[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed 8-bit unsigned integer array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <System::Byte> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, byte[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, byte[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * byte[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * byte[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Byte(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Byte[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
byte[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
byte[] managedArray2 = new byte[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Byte() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Byte
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(Int64[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 64-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <long> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (long[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (long[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : int64[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : int64[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Long(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Int64[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
source
, startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
Int64[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Int64[] managedArray2 = new Int64[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Int64() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Int64
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(Int32[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 32-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <int> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (int[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (int[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : int[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : int[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Integer(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Int32[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
startIndex
or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
int[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
int[] managedArray2 = new int[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Integer() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Integer
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(Int16[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 16-bit signed integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <short> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (short[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (short[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : int16[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : int16[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Short(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Int16[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
source
, startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
short[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
short[] managedArray2 = new short[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Short() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Short
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(Double[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed double-precision floating-point number array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <double> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (double[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (double[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : double[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : double[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Double(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Double[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
source
, startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
double[] managedArray = { 0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
double[] managedArray2 = new double[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Double() = {0.1, 0.2, 0.3, 0.4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Double
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(Char[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed character array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <char> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (char[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (char[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : char[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : char[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Char(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Char[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
// Remember that the actual size of System.Char in unmanaged memory is 2.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
char[] managedArray = new char[1000];
managedArray[0] = 'a';
managedArray[1] = 'b';
managedArray[2] = 'c';
managedArray[3] = 'd';
managedArray[999] = 'Z';
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
// int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length; // Incorrect
int size = Marshal.SystemDefaultCharSize * managedArray.Length; // Correct
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
char[] managedArray2 = new char[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("Here is the roundtripped array: {0} {1} {2} {3} {4}",
managedArray2[0], managedArray2[1], managedArray2[2], managedArray2[3],
managedArray2[999]);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
' Remember that the actual size of System.Char in unmanaged memory is 2.
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Module1
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Char() = New Char(999) {}
managedArray(0) = "a"c
managedArray(1) = "b"c
managedArray(2) = "c"c
managedArray(3) = "d"c
managedArray(999) = "Z"c
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
' Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length; ' Incorrect
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SystemDefaultCharSize * managedArray.Length ' Correct
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2 As Char() = New Char(managedArray.Length - 1) {}
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("Here is the roundtripped array: {0} {1} {2} {3} {4}", managedArray2(0), managedArray2(1), managedArray2(2), managedArray2(3), managedArray2(999))
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.
Applies to
Copy(IntPtr, Char[], Int32, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from an unmanaged memory pointer to a managed character array.
public:
static void Copy(IntPtr source, cli::array <char> ^ destination, int startIndex, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, char[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
public static void Copy (IntPtr source, char[] destination, int startIndex, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : nativeint * char[] * int * int -> unit
static member Copy : nativeint * char[] * int * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As IntPtr, destination As Char(), startIndex As Integer, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy from.
- destination
- Char[]
The array to copy to.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the destination array where copying should start.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
source
, destination
, startIndex
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory.
// Remember that the actual size of System.Char in unmanaged memory is 2.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
char[] managedArray = new char[1000];
managedArray[0] = 'a';
managedArray[1] = 'b';
managedArray[2] = 'c';
managedArray[3] = 'd';
managedArray[999] = 'Z';
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
// int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length; // Incorrect
int size = Marshal.SystemDefaultCharSize * managedArray.Length; // Correct
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
char[] managedArray2 = new char[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("Here is the roundtripped array: {0} {1} {2} {3} {4}",
managedArray2[0], managedArray2[1], managedArray2[2], managedArray2[3],
managedArray2[999]);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
' Remember that the actual size of System.Char in unmanaged memory is 2.
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Module1
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Char() = New Char(999) {}
managedArray(0) = "a"c
managedArray(1) = "b"c
managedArray(2) = "c"c
managedArray(3) = "d"c
managedArray(999) = "Z"c
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
' Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length; ' Incorrect
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SystemDefaultCharSize * managedArray.Length ' Correct
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2 As Char() = New Char(managedArray.Length - 1) {}
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("Here is the roundtripped array: {0} {1} {2} {3} {4}", managedArray2(0), managedArray2(1), managedArray2(2), managedArray2(3), managedArray2(999))
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
Unmanaged, C-style arrays do not contain bounds information, which prevents the startIndex
and length
parameters from being validated. Thus, the unmanaged data corresponding to the source
parameter populates the managed array regardless of its usefulness. You must initialize the managed array with the appropriate size before calling this method.
See also
Applies to
Copy(Byte[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32)
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
- Source:
- Marshal.cs
Copies data from a one-dimensional, managed 8-bit unsigned integer array to an unmanaged memory pointer.
public:
static void Copy(cli::array <System::Byte> ^ source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[System.Security.SecurityCritical]
public static void Copy (byte[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
public static void Copy (byte[] source, int startIndex, IntPtr destination, int length);
[<System.Security.SecurityCritical>]
static member Copy : byte[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
static member Copy : byte[] * int * nativeint * int -> unit
Public Shared Sub Copy (source As Byte(), startIndex As Integer, destination As IntPtr, length As Integer)
Parameters
- source
- Byte[]
The one-dimensional array to copy from.
- startIndex
- Int32
The zero-based index in the source array where copying should start.
- destination
-
IntPtr
nativeint
The memory pointer to copy to.
- length
- Int32
The number of array elements to copy.
- Attributes
Exceptions
startIndex
and length
are not valid.
source
, startIndex
, destination
, or length
is null
.
Examples
The following example copies an array to unmanaged memory by using the Copy(Byte[], Int32, IntPtr, Int32) overload, and then copies the unmanaged array back to managed memory by using the Copy(IntPtr, Byte[], Int32, Int32) overload.
using System;
using System.Runtime.InteropServices;
class Example
{
static void Main()
{
// Create a managed array.
byte[] managedArray = { 1, 2, 3, 4 };
// Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
int size = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray[0]) * managedArray.Length;
IntPtr pnt = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size);
try
{
// Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length);
// Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
byte[] managedArray2 = new byte[managedArray.Length];
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length);
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.");
}
finally
{
// Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt);
}
}
}
Imports System.Runtime.InteropServices
Module Example
Sub Main()
' Create a managed array.
Dim managedArray As Byte() = {1, 2, 3, 4}
' Initialize unmanaged memory to hold the array.
Dim size As Integer = Marshal.SizeOf(managedArray(0)) * managedArray.Length
Dim pnt As IntPtr = Marshal.AllocHGlobal(size)
Try
' Copy the array to unmanaged memory.
Marshal.Copy(managedArray, 0, pnt, managedArray.Length)
' Copy the unmanaged array back to another managed array.
Dim managedArray2(managedArray.Length) As Byte
Marshal.Copy(pnt, managedArray2, 0, managedArray.Length)
Console.WriteLine("The array was copied to unmanaged memory and back.")
Finally
' Free the unmanaged memory.
Marshal.FreeHGlobal(pnt)
End Try
End Sub
End Module
Remarks
You can use this method to copy a subset of a one-dimensional managed array to an unmanaged C-style array.