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C#

Strings and Characters, Part 1
By: O'Reilly Media
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    2004-07-21

    Table of Contents:
  • Strings and Characters, Part 1
  • 2.2 Determine if a character is in a Specified Range
  • 2.3 Controlling Case Sensitivity when Comparing Two Characters
  • 2.4 Finding All Occurrences of a Character Within a String
  • 2.5 Finding the Location of All Occurrences of a String Within Another String
  • 2.6 The Poor Man’s Tokenizer Problem
  • 2.7 Controlling Case Sensitivity when Comparing Two Strings
  • 2.8 Comparing a String to the Beginning or End of a Second String
  • 2.9 Inserting Text into a String
  • 2.10 Removing or Replacing Characters Within a String
  • 2.11 Encoding Binary Data as Base64
  • 2.12 Decoding a Base64-Encoded Binary

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    Strings and Characters, Part 1 - 2.2 Determine if a character is in a Specified Range


    (Page 2 of 12 )

    2.2 Determining Whether a Character Is Within a Specified Range

    Problem

    You need to determine whether a character in a char data type is within a range, such as between 1 and 5 or between A and M.

    Solution

    Use the built-in comparison support for the char data type. The following code shows how to use the built-in comparison support:

    public static bool IsInRange(char testChar, char startOfRange, char endOfRange)

    {

    if (testChar >= startOfRange && testChar <= endOfRange)

    {

    // testChar is within the range

    return (true);

    }

    else

    {

    // testChar is NOT within the range return (false);

    }
    }

    There is only one problem with that code. If the startOfRange and endOfRange characters have different cases, the result may not be what you expect. By adding the following code, which makes all characters uppercase, to the beginning of the method in Recipe 2.7, we can solve this problem:

    testChar = char.ToUpper(testChar);
    startOfRange = char.ToUpper(startOfRange);
    endOfRange = char.ToUpper(endOfRange);

    Discussion

    The IsInRange method accepts three parameters. The first is the testChar character that you need to check on, to test if it falls between the last two parameters on this method. The last two parameters are the starting and ending characters, respectively, of a range of characters. The testChar parameter must be between startOfRange and endOfRange or equal to one of theses parameters for this method to return true;other-wise, false is returned.

    The IsInRange method can be called in the following manner:

    bool inRange = IsInRange('c', 'a', 'g'); bool inRange = IsInRange('c', 'a', 'b'); bool inRange = IsInRange((char)32, 'a', 'g');

    The first call to this method returns true, since c is between a and g. The second method returns false, since c is not between a and b. The third method indicates how an integer value representative of a character would be passed to this method.

    Note that this method tests whether the testChar value is inclusive between the range of characters startOfRange and endOfRange. If you wish to determine only whether testChar is between this range exclusive of the startOfRange and endOfRange character values, you should modify the if statement, as follows:

    if (testChar > startOfRange && testChar < endOfRange)

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