IComparer Interface
Exposes a method that compares two objects.
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
The IComparer type exposes the following members.
This interface is used in conjunction with the Array.Sort and Array.BinarySearch methods. It provides a way to customize the sort order of a collection. See the Compare method for notes on parameters and return value.
The default implementation of this interface is the Comparer class. For the generic version of this interface, see System.Collections.Generic.IComparer<T>.
The following code example demonstrates the use of the IComparer interface to sort an ArrayList object. In this example, the IComparer interface is implemented using the CaseInsensitiveComparer class to reverse the order of the contents of the ArrayList.
using System; using System.Collections; public class SamplesArrayList { public class myReverserClass : IComparer { // Calls CaseInsensitiveComparer.Compare with the parameters reversed. int IComparer.Compare( Object x, Object y ) { return( (new CaseInsensitiveComparer()).Compare( y, x ) ); } } public static void Main() { // Creates and initializes a new ArrayList. ArrayList myAL = new ArrayList(); myAL.Add( "The" ); myAL.Add( "quick" ); myAL.Add( "brown" ); myAL.Add( "fox" ); myAL.Add( "jumps" ); myAL.Add( "over" ); myAL.Add( "the" ); myAL.Add( "lazy" ); myAL.Add( "dog" ); // Displays the values of the ArrayList. Console.WriteLine( "The ArrayList initially contains the following values:" ); PrintIndexAndValues( myAL ); // Sorts the values of the ArrayList using the default comparer. myAL.Sort(); Console.WriteLine( "After sorting with the default comparer:" ); PrintIndexAndValues( myAL ); // Sorts the values of the ArrayList using the reverse case-insensitive comparer. IComparer myComparer = new myReverserClass(); myAL.Sort( myComparer ); Console.WriteLine( "After sorting with the reverse case-insensitive comparer:" ); PrintIndexAndValues( myAL ); } public static void PrintIndexAndValues( IEnumerable myList ) { int i = 0; foreach ( Object obj in myList ) Console.WriteLine( "\t[{0}]:\t{1}", i++, obj ); Console.WriteLine(); } } /* This code produces the following output. The ArrayList initially contains the following values: [0]: The [1]: quick [2]: brown [3]: fox [4]: jumps [5]: over [6]: the [7]: lazy [8]: dog After sorting with the default comparer: [0]: brown [1]: dog [2]: fox [3]: jumps [4]: lazy [5]: over [6]: quick [7]: the [8]: The After sorting with the reverse case-insensitive comparer: [0]: the [1]: The [2]: quick [3]: over [4]: lazy [5]: jumps [6]: fox [7]: dog [8]: brown */
Windows 7, Windows Vista SP1 or later, Windows XP SP3, Windows XP SP2 x64 Edition, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core supported with SP1 or later), Windows Server 2003 SP2
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.

