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Easy way to copy a List<List<T>>

List<List<T>a=p aram;
List<List<T>b=a ;
If I change b, then a is get changed. I want another copy of a, that is
completely independent of a. I used double-nested for loop to copy each
element manually. Is there any more efficent way to do that? Something
like,
List<List<T>b=C reateClone(a);

Thanks.

Jul 28 '06 #1
4 33134
Sin Jeong-hun,

The easiest way to do this would be to use the ConvertAll method on the
instance itself. You can always convert the list to itself. =)

So, you can do:

// This assumes T is a valid type.
List<List<T>a = param;

// Make a copy.
List<List<T>b = a.ConvertAll(de legate(T input) { return input; });

Basically, you are passing the value through to a new list.

Hope this helps.
--
- Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP]
- mv*@spam.guard. caspershouse.co m

"Sin Jeong-hun" <ty*******@gmai l.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ m79g2000cwm.goo glegroups.com.. .
List<List<T>a=p aram;
List<List<T>b=a ;
If I change b, then a is get changed. I want another copy of a, that is
completely independent of a. I used double-nested for loop to copy each
element manually. Is there any more efficent way to do that? Something
like,
List<List<T>b=C reateClone(a);

Thanks.

Jul 28 '06 #2
Thank you all!

Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP] wrote:
Sin Jeong-hun,

The easiest way to do this would be to use the ConvertAll method on the
instance itself. You can always convert the list to itself. =)

So, you can do:

// This assumes T is a valid type.
List<List<T>a = param;

// Make a copy.
List<List<T>b = a.ConvertAll(de legate(T input) { return input; });

Basically, you are passing the value through to a new list.

Hope this helps.
--
- Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP]
- mv*@spam.guard. caspershouse.co m

"Sin Jeong-hun" <ty*******@gmai l.comwrote in message
news:11******** **************@ m79g2000cwm.goo glegroups.com.. .
List<List<T>a=p aram;
List<List<T>b=a ;
If I change b, then a is get changed. I want another copy of a, that is
completely independent of a. I used double-nested for loop to copy each
element manually. Is there any more efficent way to do that? Something
like,
List<List<T>b=C reateClone(a);

Thanks.
Jul 28 '06 #3
"Nicholas Paldino [.NET/C# MVP]" wrote:
// Make a copy.
List<List<T>b = a.ConvertAll(de legate(T input) { return input; });
This won't compile - you need to write "ConvertAll<Lis t<T>>". More
importantly, this only clones the 'outer list' - you get a new list of
the same inner List<Telements. If you want a wholly independent copy
(so that changing one of the lists in the original tree doesn't affect
the copy) you need

List<List<T>Dee pCopy =
List.ConvertAll <List<T>>(deleg ate(List<TBranc h)
{
return Branch.ConvertA ll<T>(delegate( T Leaf){return Leaf;});
});
--

..NET 2.0 for Delphi Programmers www.midnightbeach.com/.net
Delphi skills make .NET easy to learn In print, in stores.
Jul 28 '06 #4
List<List<T>Dee pCopy =
List.ConvertAll <List<T>>(deleg ate(List<TBranc h)
{
return Branch.ConvertA ll<T>(delegate( T Leaf){return Leaf;});
});
If T is a reference type, this method will still not be "deep" enough.
The leafs will just be refering to the same objects. To fix this I
guess you could make sure T inmplementes ICloneable and let Clone()
return a deap copy of T. Then the code should be:

List<List<T>Dee pCopy =
List.ConvertAll <List<T>>(deleg ate(List<TBranc h)
{
return Branch.ConvertA ll<T>(delegate( T Leaf){return
Leaf.Clone();}) ;
});

Aug 25 '06 #5

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