Why does this return False
public enum Directions { Up, Down, Left, Right }
static void Main(string[] args)
{
bool matches = IsOneOf(Directions.Right, Directions.Left, Directions.Right);
Console.WriteLine(matches);
Console.Read();
}
public static bool IsOneOf(Enum self, params Enum[] values)
{
foreach (var value in values)
if (self == value)
return true;
return false;
}
while this returns True?
public static bool IsOneOf(Enum self, params Enum[] values)
{
foreach (var value in values)
if (self.Equals(value))
return true;
return false;
}
Enum does not implement a == equality operator but it does override the Equals method.
Since it does not implement ==, the system performs a reference equality check. Note that System.Enum is a class not a structure. Hence, values such as Directions.Left are boxed. In this particular case, the boxed objects end up being separate objects, hence they fail a reference equality test.
The compiler understands == for concrete Enum types (such as Directions), but the compiler does not do this special processing against the System.Enum type.
As JB says, boxing. You can see this by changing from Enum to Directions:
true is returned.