NameObjectCollectionBase.BaseGet Method (Int32)
.NET Framework (current version)
Gets the value of the entry at the specified index of the NameObjectCollectionBase instance.
Assembly: System (in System.dll)
Parameters
- index
-
Type:
System.Int32
The zero-based index of the value to get.
Return Value
Type: System.ObjectAn Object that represents the value of the entry at the specified index.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentOutOfRangeException | index is outside the valid range of indexes for the collection. |
This method is an O(1) operation.
The following code example uses BaseGetKey and BaseGet to get specific keys and values.
Imports System Imports System.Collections Imports System.Collections.Specialized Public Class MyCollection Inherits NameObjectCollectionBase Private _de As New DictionaryEntry() ' Gets a key-and-value pair (DictionaryEntry) using an index. Default Public ReadOnly Property Item(index As Integer) As DictionaryEntry Get _de.Key = Me.BaseGetKey(index) _de.Value = Me.BaseGet(index) Return _de End Get End Property ' Gets or sets the value associated with the specified key. Default Public Property Item(key As [String]) As [Object] Get Return Me.BaseGet(key) End Get Set Me.BaseSet(key, value) End Set End Property ' Adds elements from an IDictionary into the new collection. Public Sub New(d As IDictionary) Dim de As DictionaryEntry For Each de In d Me.BaseAdd(CType(de.Key, [String]), de.Value) Next de End Sub 'NewNew End Class 'MyCollection Public Class SamplesNameObjectCollectionBase Public Shared Sub Main() ' Creates and initializes a new MyCollection instance. Dim d = New ListDictionary() d.Add("red", "apple") d.Add("yellow", "banana") d.Add("green", "pear") Dim myCol As New MyCollection(d) Console.WriteLine("Initial state of the collection (Count = {0}):", myCol.Count) PrintKeysAndValues(myCol) ' Gets specific keys and values. Console.WriteLine("The key at index 0 is {0}.", myCol(0).Key) Console.WriteLine("The value at index 0 is {0}.", myCol(0).Value) Console.WriteLine("The value associated with the key ""green"" is {0}.", myCol("green")) End Sub 'Main Public Shared Sub PrintKeysAndValues(myCol As MyCollection) Dim i As Integer For i = 0 To myCol.Count - 1 Console.WriteLine("[{0}] : {1}, {2}", i, myCol(i).Key, myCol(i).Value) Next i End Sub 'PrintKeysAndValues End Class 'SamplesNameObjectCollectionBase 'This code produces the following output. ' 'Initial state of the collection (Count = 3): '[0] : red, apple '[1] : yellow, banana '[2] : green, pear 'The key at index 0 is red. 'The value at index 0 is apple. 'The value associated with the key "green" is pear.
Universal Windows Platform
Available since 10
.NET Framework
Available since 1.1
Available since 10
.NET Framework
Available since 1.1
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