CharacterRange.Equals Method
Definition
Important
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Overloads
Equals(CharacterRange) |
Indicates whether the current instance is equal to another instance of the same type. |
Equals(Object) |
Gets a value indicating whether this object is equivalent to the specified object. |
Equals(CharacterRange)
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
Indicates whether the current instance is equal to another instance of the same type.
public:
virtual bool Equals(System::Drawing::CharacterRange other);
public readonly bool Equals (System.Drawing.CharacterRange other);
public bool Equals (System.Drawing.CharacterRange other);
override this.Equals : System.Drawing.CharacterRange -> bool
Public Function Equals (other As CharacterRange) As Boolean
Parameters
- other
- CharacterRange
An instance to compare with this instance.
Returns
true
if the current instance is equal to the other instance; otherwise, false
.
Implements
Applies to
Equals(Object)
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
- Source:
- CharacterRange.cs
Gets a value indicating whether this object is equivalent to the specified object.
public:
override bool Equals(System::Object ^ obj);
public override readonly bool Equals (object? obj);
public override bool Equals (object obj);
public override bool Equals (object? obj);
override this.Equals : obj -> bool
Public Overrides Function Equals (obj As Object) As Boolean
Parameters
- obj
- Object
The object to compare to for equality.
Returns
true
to indicate the specified object is an instance with the same First and Length value as this instance; otherwise, false
.
Examples
The following example demonstrates how to use the Equals method. To run this example, paste it into a Windows Form. Handle the form's Paint event and call the CharacterRangeEquality2
method from the Paint event-handling method, passing e
as PaintEventArgs.
private void CharacterRangeEquality2()
{
// Declare the string to draw.
string message = "Strings or strings; that is the question.";
// Compare the ranges for equality. The should not be equal.
CharacterRange range1 =
new CharacterRange(message.IndexOf("Strings"), "Strings".Length);
CharacterRange range2 =
new CharacterRange(message.IndexOf("strings"), "strings".Length);
if (range1.Equals(range2))
MessageBox.Show("The ranges are equal.");
else
MessageBox.Show("The ranges are not equal.");
}
Private Sub CharacterRangeEquality2()
' Declare the string to draw.
Dim message As String = "Strings or strings; that is the question."
' Compare the ranges for equality. The should not be equal.
Dim range1 As New CharacterRange(message.IndexOf("Strings"), _
"Strings".Length)
Dim range2 As New CharacterRange(message.IndexOf("strings"), _
"strings".Length)
If range1.Equals(range2) Then
MessageBox.Show("The ranges are equal.")
Else
MessageBox.Show("The ranges are not equal.")
End If
End Sub
Remarks
You can also use Equality to test for equality.
Applies to
.NET