Chapter 9. Arrays, Indexers, and Collections
The .NET Framework provides a rich suite of collection classes. With the advent of Generics in .NET 2.0, most of these collection classes are now type-safe, making for a greatly enhanced programming experience. These classes include the Array, List, Dictionary, Sorted Dictionary, Queue
, and Stack
.
The simplest collection is the Array
, the only collection type for which C# provides built-in support. In this chapter, you will learn to work with single, multidimensional, and jagged arrays. Arrays have built-in indexers, allowing you to request the nth member of the array. In this chapter, you will also be introduced to creating your own indexers, a bit of C# syntactic sugar that makes it easier to access class properties as though the class were indexed like an array.
The .NET Framework provides a number of interfaces, such as IEnumerable
and ICollection
, whose implementation provides you with standard ways to interact with collections. In this chapter, you will see how to work with the most essential of these. The chapter concludes with a tour of commonly used .NET collections, including List, Dictionary, Queue
, and Stack
.
Tip
In previous versions of C#, the collection objects were not type-safe (you could, for example, mix strings and integers in a Dictionary
). The nontype-safe versions of List
(ArrayList
), Dictionary, Queue
, and Stack
are still available for backward compatibility, but we won't cover them in this book because their use is ...
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