ResourceSet.GetObject Method (String, Boolean)
[ This article is for Windows Phone 8 developers. If you’re developing for Windows 10, see the latest documentation. ]
Searches for a resource object with the specified name in a case-insensitive manner, if requested.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- name
- Type: System.String
Name of the resource to search for.
- ignoreCase
- Type: System.Boolean
Indicates whether the case of the specified name should be ignored.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentNullException | The name parameter is null. |
| InvalidOperationException | This ResourceSet has been closed. |
| ObjectDisposedException | The object has been disposed. |
If the value of the ignoreCase parameter is true, a resource with the name "Resource" is equivalent to the resource with the name "resource". Note, however, that this method always performs case-insensitive string comparisons using CultureInfo.InvariantCulture. The advantage is that results of case-insensitive string comparisons performed by this method are the same on all computers regardless of culture. The disadvantage is that the results are not consistent with the casing rules of all cultures.
For example, the Turkish alphabet has two versions of the character I: one with a dot and one without a dot. In Turkish, the character I (Unicode 0049) is considered the uppercase version of a different character ı (Unicode 0131). The character i (Unicode 0069) is considered the lowercase version of yet another character İ (Unicode 0130). According to these casing rules, a case-insensitive string comparison of the characters i (Unicode 0069) and I (Unicode 0049) should fail for the culture "tr-TR" (Turkish in Turkey). Using the GetObject method with ignoreCase set to true, this comparison succeeds.