Equality operators - test if two objects are equal or not
The ==
(equality) and !=
(inequality) operators check if their operands are equal or not. Value types are equal when their contents are equal. Reference types are equal when the two variables refer to the same storage.
Equality operator ==
The equality operator ==
returns true
if its operands are equal, false
otherwise.
Value types equality
Operands of the built-in value types are equal if their values are equal:
int a = 1 + 2 + 3;
int b = 6;
Console.WriteLine(a == b); // output: True
char c1 = 'a';
char c2 = 'A';
Console.WriteLine(c1 == c2); // output: False
Console.WriteLine(c1 == char.ToLower(c2)); // output: True
Note
For the ==
, <
, >
, <=
, and >=
operators, if any of the operands is not a number (Double.NaN or Single.NaN), the result of operation is false
. That means that the NaN
value is neither greater than, less than, nor equal to any other double
(or float
) value, including NaN
. For more information and examples, see the Double.NaN or Single.NaN reference article.
Two operands of the same enum type are equal if the corresponding values of the underlying integral type are equal.
User-defined struct types don't support the ==
operator by default. To support the ==
operator, a user-defined struct must overload it.
The ==
and !=
operators are supported by C# tuples. For more information, see the Tuple equality section of the Tuple types article.
Reference types equality
By default, two non-record reference-type operands are equal if they refer to the same object:
public class ReferenceTypesEquality
{
public class MyClass
{
private int id;
public MyClass(int id) => this.id = id;
}
public static void Main()
{
var a = new MyClass(1);
var b = new MyClass(1);
var c = a;
Console.WriteLine(a == b); // output: False
Console.WriteLine(a == c); // output: True
}
}
As the example shows, user-defined reference types support the ==
operator by default. However, a reference type can overload the ==
operator. If a reference type overloads the ==
operator, use the Object.ReferenceEquals method to check if two references of that type refer to the same object.
Record types equality
Record types support the ==
and !=
operators that by default provide value equality semantics. That is, two record operands are equal when both of them are null
or corresponding values of all fields and auto-implemented properties are equal.
public class RecordTypesEquality
{
public record Point(int X, int Y, string Name);
public record TaggedNumber(int Number, List<string> Tags);
public static void Main()
{
var p1 = new Point(2, 3, "A");
var p2 = new Point(1, 3, "B");
var p3 = new Point(2, 3, "A");
Console.WriteLine(p1 == p2); // output: False
Console.WriteLine(p1 == p3); // output: True
var n1 = new TaggedNumber(2, new List<string>() { "A" });
var n2 = new TaggedNumber(2, new List<string>() { "A" });
Console.WriteLine(n1 == n2); // output: False
}
}
As the preceding example shows, for non-record reference-type members their reference values are compared, not the referenced instances.
String equality
Two string operands are equal when both of them are null
or both string instances are of the same length and have identical characters in each character position:
string s1 = "hello!";
string s2 = "HeLLo!";
Console.WriteLine(s1 == s2.ToLower()); // output: True
string s3 = "Hello!";
Console.WriteLine(s1 == s3); // output: False
String equality comparisons are case-sensitive ordinal comparisons. For more information about string comparison, see How to compare strings in C#.
Delegate equality
Two delegate operands of the same run-time type are equal when both of them are null
or their invocation lists are of the same length and have equal entries in each position:
Action a = () => Console.WriteLine("a");
Action b = a + a;
Action c = a + a;
Console.WriteLine(object.ReferenceEquals(b, c)); // output: False
Console.WriteLine(b == c); // output: True
For more information, see the Delegate equality operators section of the C# language specification.
Delegates that are produced from evaluation of semantically identical lambda expressions aren't equal, as the following example shows:
Action a = () => Console.WriteLine("a");
Action b = () => Console.WriteLine("a");
Console.WriteLine(a == b); // output: False
Console.WriteLine(a + b == a + b); // output: True
Console.WriteLine(b + a == a + b); // output: False
Inequality operator !=
The inequality operator !=
returns true
if its operands aren't equal, false
otherwise. For the operands of the built-in types, the expression x != y
produces the same result as the expression !(x == y)
. For more information about type equality, see the Equality operator section.
The following example demonstrates the usage of the !=
operator:
int a = 1 + 1 + 2 + 3;
int b = 6;
Console.WriteLine(a != b); // output: True
string s1 = "Hello";
string s2 = "Hello";
Console.WriteLine(s1 != s2); // output: False
object o1 = 1;
object o2 = 1;
Console.WriteLine(o1 != o2); // output: True
Operator overloadability
A user-defined type can overload the ==
and !=
operators. If a type overloads one of the two operators, it must also overload the other one.
A record type can't explicitly overload the ==
and !=
operators. If you need to change the behavior of the ==
and !=
operators for record type T
, implement the IEquatable<T>.Equals method with the following signature:
public virtual bool Equals(T? other);
C# language specification
For more information, see the Relational and type-testing operators section of the C# language specification.
For more information about equality of record types, see the Equality members section of the records feature proposal note.
See also
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