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c#linqiequalitycomparer

Using IEqualityComparer for Union


I simply want to remove duplicates from two lists and combine them into one list. I also need to be able to define what a duplicate is. I define a duplicate by the ColumnIndex property, if they are the same, they are duplicates. Here is the approach I took:

I found a nifty example of how to write inline comparers for the random occassions where you need em only once in a code segment.

public class InlineComparer<T> : IEqualityComparer<T>
{
    private readonly Func<T, T, bool> getEquals;
    private readonly Func<T, int> getHashCode;

    public InlineComparer(Func<T, T, bool> equals, Func<T, int> hashCode)
    {
        getEquals = equals;
        getHashCode = hashCode;
    }

    public bool Equals(T x, T y)
    {
        return getEquals(x, y);
    }

    public int GetHashCode(T obj)
    {
        return getHashCode(obj);
    }
}

Then I just have my two lists, and attempt a union on them with the comparer.

            var formatIssues = issues.Where(i => i.IsFormatError == true);
            var groupIssues = issues.Where(i => i.IsGroupError == true);

            var dupComparer = new InlineComparer<Issue>((i1, i2) => i1.ColumnInfo.ColumnIndex == i2.ColumnInfo.ColumnIndex, 
            i => i.ColumnInfo.ColumnIndex);

            var filteredIssues = groupIssues.Union(formatIssues, dupComparer);

The result set however is null.

Where am I going astray? I have already confirmed that the two lists have columns with equal ColumnIndex properties.


Solution

  • I've just run your code on a test set.... and it works!

        public class InlineComparer<T> : IEqualityComparer<T>
        {
            private readonly Func<T, T, bool> getEquals;
            private readonly Func<T, int> getHashCode;
    
            public InlineComparer(Func<T, T, bool> equals, Func<T, int> hashCode)
            {
                getEquals = equals;
                getHashCode = hashCode;
            }
    
            public bool Equals(T x, T y)
            {
                return getEquals(x, y);
            }
    
            public int GetHashCode(T obj)
            {
                return getHashCode(obj);
            }
        }
    
        class TestClass
        {
            public string S { get; set; }
        }
    
        [TestMethod]
        public void testThis()
        {
            var l1 = new List<TestClass>()
                         {
                             new TestClass() {S = "one"},
                             new TestClass() {S = "two"},
                         };
            var l2 = new List<TestClass>()
                         {
                             new TestClass() {S = "three"},
                             new TestClass() {S = "two"},
                         };
    
            var dupComparer = new InlineComparer<TestClass>((i1, i2) => i1.S == i2.S, i => i.S.GetHashCode());
    
            var unionList = l1.Union(l2, dupComparer);
    
            Assert.AreEqual(3, unionList);
        }
    

    So... maybe go back and check your test data - or run it with some other test data?

    After all - for a Union to be empty - that suggests that both your input lists are also empty?