ReSharper 2018.2 Help

Generating Relational Comparer

ReSharper | Edit | Generate Code | Relational Comparer
Alt+Insert | Relational Comparer
ReSharper_GenerateRelationalComparer

ReSharper helps you create a nested comparer class derived from Comparer<T> using selected fields and properties. In addition to choosing a string comparison algorithm and generating null checks, you can opt for generating a static property that will expose the comparer class to consumers.

In the example below, this command is used to generate a relational comparer that takes into account int _birthYear and string _name fields when to compare objects of the Person class.

Before generation

After generation

class Person { private int _birthYear; private string _name; }

class Person { private int _birthYear; private string _name; private sealed class BirthYearNameRelationalComparer : Comparer<Person> { public override int Compare(Person x, Person y) { if (ReferenceEquals(x, y)) return 0; if (ReferenceEquals(null, y)) return 1; if (ReferenceEquals(null, x)) return -1; var birthYearComparison = x._birthYear.CompareTo(y._birthYear); if (birthYearComparison != 0) return birthYearComparison; return string.Compare(x._name, y._name, StringComparison.Ordinal); } } public static Comparer<Person> BirthYearNameComparer { get; } = new BirthYearNameRelationalComparer(); }

To generate a relational comparer class

  1. In the editor, set the caret on the type name or within a type at the line where you want to insert a relational comparer class. If the caret is on the type name, the generated code will be added in the beginning of the type declaration.

  2. Press Alt+Insert or choose ReSharper | Edit | Generate Codeā€¦ from the main menu. Alternatively, you can press Ctrl+Shift+A, start typing the command name in the pop-up, and then choose it there.

  3. In the Generate pop-up menu, select Relational Comparer.

  4. In the Generate dialog that appears, you will see a list of properties and fields. Select the members that you want to use for type comparison.
    Generating a relational comparer class with ReSharper

    If there are no fields/properties in your type or you do not select any of them, ReSharper, depending on your settings, throws new NotImplementedException(), returns default value, or puts code that will not compile in the body of the generated methods. You can configure the settings on the Code Editing | Members Generation page of ReSharper options.

    Optionally, use the following controls in the dialog:

    • Fields can be null — appears if there are any nullable fields or properties in your type. By default, this check box is selected, meaning that ReSharper will generate null checks for selected fields. You can clear this check box if you do not need null checks.

    • String comparison — appears if there are any string fields in your type. ReSharper will generate string.Compare(string, string, StringComparison) for the selected strings, and the selector lets you choose which value should be generated for the StringComparison argument.

    • Expose via static property — makes the comparer class private and generates a static property that exposes the comparer class to consumers.

    • Comparer name prefix — allows you to specify a prefix that will be used in the name of the generated comparer class.

  5. Click Finish to complete the wizard.
    You can also click Options to review or modify common code generation preferences on the Code Editing | Members Generation page of ReSharper options.

This feature is supported in the following languages and technologies:

Language: C#

Language: VB.NET

Language: C++

Language: HTML

Language: ASP.NET

Language: Razor

Language: JavaScript

Language: TypeScript

Language: CSS

Language: XML

Language: XAML

Language: Resx

Language: Build Scripts

Language: Protobuf

Language: JSON

Feature is available

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The instructions and examples given here address the use of the feature in C#. For details specific to other languages, see corresponding topics in the ReSharper by Language section.

Last modified: 21 December 2018

See Also