What is main use of Enumeration in c#?
Edited:- suppose I want to compare the string variable with the any enumeration item then how i can do this
Enumeration (Enum) is a variable type. We can find this variable type in C, C# and many other languages. Basic Idea for Enum is that if we have a group of variable of integer type (by default) then instead of using too much int values just use a Enum. It is efficient way. Let suppose you want to write rainbow colours then you may write like this:
const int Red = 1;
const int Orange = 2;
const int Yellow = 3;
const int Green = 4;
const int Blue = 5;
const int Indigo = 6;
const int Violet = 7;
here you can see that too many int declarations. If you or your program by mistake change the value of any integer varialbe i.e. Violet = 115 instead of 7 then it will very hard to debug.
So, here comes Enum. You can define Enum for any group of variables type integers. For Enum you may write your code like this:
enum rainBowColors
{
red=1,
orange=2,
yellow=3,
green,
blue=8,
indigo=8,
violet=16)
};
rainBowColors is a type and only other variables of the same type can be assigned to this. In C#/C++ you need to type casting while in C you do not to type cast.
Now, if you want to declare a variable of type rainBowColors then in C
enum rainBowColors variableOne = red;
And in C# / C++ you can do this as:
rainBowColors variableOne = red;
Enumerations in my experience have worked in very specific cases and should be used when you absolutely need to maintain this in your application. Problems come into play with Enums when you are working with multiple developers and some new developer comes on to a project and can adds a enum to the application no errors everything builds but then you have another full stack developer that maintains this same list in a lookup table in a different order. Kaboom!!!!
Burned way to many times with that one even if not intentional. Rule of thumb don't maintain a list of enums in a app over 5 or 6 items. If higher you might as well store them in a lookup table in the DB of your choice.
Often you find you have something - data, a classification, whatever - which is best expressed as one of several discrete states which can be represented with integers. The classic example is months of the year. We would like the months of the year to be representable as both strings ("August 19, 2010") and as numbers ("8/19/2010"). Enum
provides a concise way to assign names to a bunch of integers, so we can use simple loops through integers to move through months.
Enumeration (ENUM)
An enum is a value type with a set of related named constants often referred to as an enumerator list. The enum keyword is used to declare an enumeration. It is a primitive data type, which is user defined.
Enums type can be integer (float, int, byte, double etc.). But if you used beside int it has to be cast.
enum Days { Sunday, Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday }; enum Months : byte { Jan, Feb, Mar, Apr, May, Jun, Jul, Aug, Sep, Oct, Nov, Dec };
Another advantage of using Enum is that in case of any of the integer value needs to be changed, we need to change only Enum definition and we can avoid changing code all over the place.
Enums are strongly typed constants. Enumerations are special sets of named values which all maps to a set of numbers, usually integers. They come in handy when you wish to be able to choose between a set of constant values, and with each possible value relating to a number, they can be used in a wide range of situations. As you will see in our example, enumerations are defined above classes, inside our namespace. This means we can use enumerations from all classes within the same namespace.
using System;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
public enum Days { Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday, Sunday }
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Days day = Days.Monday;
Console.WriteLine((int)day);
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}