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StephenCleary edited this page May 12, 2014
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The Comparers library has four main parts:
- Comparer implementations. You can use the
Compare
/EqualityCompare
andCompareSource
/EqualityCompareSource
classes to create comparer instances with a fluent API. - Extension methods for comparers. The
ComparerExtensions
andEqualityComparerExtensions
classes provide extensions that can be used to modify any comparer (including custom or built-in comparers). - Assistance for a type defining its own default comparer.
- Extension methods for LINQ to Objects/Rx/Ix. All operators that take a comparer get overloads that allow a fluent API syntax for defining a comparer right within the LINQ query.
Every full comparer provided by this library implements IFullComparer<T>
, which derives from all four interfaces IComparer<T>
, IComparer
, IEqualityComparer<T>
, and IEqualityComparer
. Every equality comparer provided by this library implements IFullEqualityComparer<T>
, which derives from both IEqualityComparer<T>
and IEqualityComparer
.
This means they can be used with any generic or non-generic container or algorithm. Also, all the comparers implement equality comparison as well, so they can be used with hash-based containers and algorithms.
Since the .NET Comparer<T>.Default
type does not implement IEqualityComparer<T>
, this library provides its own default comparer.