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问题:
I'm wondering what the correct way to compare two characters ignoring case that will work for all cultures. Also, is Comparer<char>.Default
the best way to test two characters without ignoring case? Does this work for surrogate-pairs?
EDIT: Added sample IComparer<char>
implementation
If this helps anyone this is what I've decided to use
public class CaseInsensitiveCharComparer : IComparer<char> {
private readonly System.Globalization.CultureInfo ci;
public CaseInsensitiveCharComparer(System.Globalization.CultureInfo ci) {
this.ci = ci;
}
public CaseInsensitiveCharComparer()
: this(System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CurrentCulture) { }
public int Compare(char x, char y) {
return Char.ToUpper(x, ci) - Char.ToUpper(y, ci);
}
}
// Prints 3
Console.WriteLine("This is a test".CountChars('t', new CaseInsensitiveCharComparer()));
回答1:
It depends on what you mean by "work for all cultures". Would you want "i" and "I" to be equal even in Turkey?
You could use:
bool equal = char.ToUpperInvariant(x) == char.ToUpperInvariant(y);
... but I'm not sure whether that "works" according to all cultures by your understanding of "works".
Of course you could convert both characters to strings and then perform whatever comparison you want on the strings. Somewhat less efficient, but it does give you all the range of comparisons available in the framework:
bool equal = x.ToString().Equals(y.ToString(),
StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase);
For surrogate pairs, a Comparer<char>
isn't going to be feasible anyway, because you don't have a single char
. You could create a Comparer<int>
though.
回答2:
Using the default (that is not the invariant) culture:
if (char.ToLower(ch1) == char.ToLower(ch2))
{ .... }
Or specify a culture:
CultureInfo myCulture = ...;
if (char.ToLower(ch1, myCulture) == char.ToLower(ch2, myCulture))
{ .... }
回答3:
As I understand it, there isn't really a way that will "work for all cultures". Either you want to compare characters for some kind of internal, non-displayed-to-the-user reason (in which case you should use the InvariantCulture), or you want to use the CurrentCulture of the user. Obviously, using the user's current culture will mean that you will get different results in different locales, but they will be consistent with what your users in those locales will expect.
Without knowing more about WHY you are comparing two characters, I can't really advise you on which one you should be using.
回答4:
string.Compare("string a","STRING A",true)
It will work for every string
回答5:
You could try:
class Test{
static int Compare(char t, char p){
return string.Compare(t.ToString(), p.ToString(), StringComparison.CurrentCultureIgnoreCase);
}
}
But I doubt this is the "optimal" way to do it, but I'm not all of the cases you need to be checking...
回答6:
What I was thinking that would be available within the runtime is something like the following
public class CaseInsensitiveCharComparer : IComparer<char> {
private readonly System.Globalization.CultureInfo ci;
public CaseInsensitiveCharComparer(System.Globalization.CultureInfo ci) {
this.ci = ci;
}
public CaseInsensitiveCharComparer()
: this(System.Globalization.CultureInfo.CurrentCulture) { }
public int Compare(char x, char y) {
return Char.ToUpper(x, ci) - Char.ToUpper(y, ci);
}
}
// Prints 3
Console.WriteLine("This is a test".CountChars('t', new CaseInsensitiveCharComparer()));
回答7:
I would recommend comparing uppercase, and if they don't match then comparing lowercase, just in case the locale's uppercasing and lowercasing logic behave slightly different.
Addendum
For example,
int CompareChar(char c1, char c2)
{
int dif;
dif = char.ToUpper(c1) - char.ToUpper(c2);
if (diff != 0)
dif = char.ToLower(c1) - char.ToLower(c2);
return dif;
}
回答8:
You can provide last argument as true for caseInsensetive match
string.Compare(lowerCase, upperCase, true);