How to: Define Collections in Your Classes
You can add a collection to one of your classes to manage groups of objects your class uses. The simplest way of doing this is to add a public variable of type Collection to your class. Consider a hypothetical class called widgetRepository
that manages and exposes widget
objects. You might create a widgetColl
variable to refer to a widget
collection, as discussed in the following procedure.
Defining a Simple Collection
To define a simple collection in a class
Create a public variable to act as a collection for your objects.
Public Class widgetRepository Public widgetColl As New Microsoft.VisualBasic.Collection() ' Insert code to implement additional functionality. End Class
The class
widgetRepository
now has a public collection to which you can addwidget
objects. You can then use a For Each...Next Statement (Visual Basic) to process the collection elements, as the following code demonstrates.For Each aWidget As widget In widgetColl ' Insert code to process widgetColl elements Next aWidget
The
widgetColl
collection defined in the preceding example is not strongly typed, which means you can add any type of object to it, not justwidget
objects. This can lead to type safety problems. For example, suppose you add a String to the collection, as in the following code.Dim notWidget As String = "This is not a widget object!" widgetColl.Add(notWidget)
If you do this, the For Each loop in the previous procedure throws an ArgumentException exception at run time because an element of the collection is not of type
widget
.We recommend that you define a generic class when you want to ensure type safety. For more information and an example, see How to: Define Type-Safe Collections.
See Also
Tasks
How to: Define Type-Safe Collections
Reference
Concepts
Visual Basic Collection Class
Collections in Visual Basic
Generic Types in Visual Basic