If you always want the dictionary only to compare on A and B, you have two options. Either use the constructor that implements IEqualityComparer<TKey>
and put your comparison logic there, or have your class implement IEquateable<T>
GetHashCode and Equals so the default comparer will give you the results you are looking for.
If you only want to compare on A and B in your one situation you will need to use the .Keys property and the Linq extension method Contains that allows you to pass in a IEqualityComparer<T>
. However, when doing it this way you loose the speed benefits of using a Dictionary, so use it sparingly.
public class MyClassSpecialComparer : IEqualityComparer<myClass>
{
public bool Equals (myClass x, myClass y)
{
return x.A == y.A && x.B == y.B
}
public int GetHashCode(myClass x)
{
return x.A.GetHashCode() + x.B.GetHashCode();
}
}
//Special case for when you only want it to compare this one time
//NOTE: This will be much slower than a normal lookup.
var myClassSpecialComparer = new MyClassSpecialComparer();
Dictionary<myClass, List<string>> dict = new Dictionary<myClass, List<string>>();
//(Snip)
if (dict.Keys.Contains(second, myClassSpecialComparer ))
{
//
//should come here and update List<string> for first (and only in this example) key
//
}
//If you want it to always compare
Dictionary<myClass, List<string>> dict = new Dictionary<myClass, List<string>>(new MyClassSpecialComparer());
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