How to change property values in a IList












0















 Public class temp()
{
int code;
string name;
}

IList<temp> res="assume is has a list of values"

public void modify<T>(ref Ilist<T> list)
{
list[0].code=0;
list[0].name="";
}


i was getting an error "list does not contain a definition for code/name" . is there any way to change the values in IList










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    0















     Public class temp()
    {
    int code;
    string name;
    }

    IList<temp> res="assume is has a list of values"

    public void modify<T>(ref Ilist<T> list)
    {
    list[0].code=0;
    list[0].name="";
    }


    i was getting an error "list does not contain a definition for code/name" . is there any way to change the values in IList










    share|improve this question

























      0












      0








      0








       Public class temp()
      {
      int code;
      string name;
      }

      IList<temp> res="assume is has a list of values"

      public void modify<T>(ref Ilist<T> list)
      {
      list[0].code=0;
      list[0].name="";
      }


      i was getting an error "list does not contain a definition for code/name" . is there any way to change the values in IList










      share|improve this question














       Public class temp()
      {
      int code;
      string name;
      }

      IList<temp> res="assume is has a list of values"

      public void modify<T>(ref Ilist<T> list)
      {
      list[0].code=0;
      list[0].name="";
      }


      i was getting an error "list does not contain a definition for code/name" . is there any way to change the values in IList







      asp.net-mvc c#-4.0 c#-3.0






      share|improve this question













      share|improve this question











      share|improve this question




      share|improve this question










      asked Dec 31 '18 at 7:17









      ParzivalParzival

      294




      294
























          1 Answer
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          0














          You current example does not makes much sense.



          But one way is to constraint your method's generic type parameter to some interface like:



          public interface ITemp
          {
          int code { get; set; }
          string name {get; set;}
          }


          and your specific types would be inheriting it with some implementation



          public class Temp : ITemp
          {
          // implementation
          }


          and then you can write a generic method :



          public void modify<T>(ref IList<T> list) where T : ITemp
          {
          list[0].code=0;
          list[0].name="";
          }


          But this should be done only when you have multiple classes with some common properties and you need a generic method to do some work on those.






          share|improve this answer























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            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes








            1 Answer
            1






            active

            oldest

            votes









            active

            oldest

            votes






            active

            oldest

            votes









            0














            You current example does not makes much sense.



            But one way is to constraint your method's generic type parameter to some interface like:



            public interface ITemp
            {
            int code { get; set; }
            string name {get; set;}
            }


            and your specific types would be inheriting it with some implementation



            public class Temp : ITemp
            {
            // implementation
            }


            and then you can write a generic method :



            public void modify<T>(ref IList<T> list) where T : ITemp
            {
            list[0].code=0;
            list[0].name="";
            }


            But this should be done only when you have multiple classes with some common properties and you need a generic method to do some work on those.






            share|improve this answer




























              0














              You current example does not makes much sense.



              But one way is to constraint your method's generic type parameter to some interface like:



              public interface ITemp
              {
              int code { get; set; }
              string name {get; set;}
              }


              and your specific types would be inheriting it with some implementation



              public class Temp : ITemp
              {
              // implementation
              }


              and then you can write a generic method :



              public void modify<T>(ref IList<T> list) where T : ITemp
              {
              list[0].code=0;
              list[0].name="";
              }


              But this should be done only when you have multiple classes with some common properties and you need a generic method to do some work on those.






              share|improve this answer


























                0












                0








                0







                You current example does not makes much sense.



                But one way is to constraint your method's generic type parameter to some interface like:



                public interface ITemp
                {
                int code { get; set; }
                string name {get; set;}
                }


                and your specific types would be inheriting it with some implementation



                public class Temp : ITemp
                {
                // implementation
                }


                and then you can write a generic method :



                public void modify<T>(ref IList<T> list) where T : ITemp
                {
                list[0].code=0;
                list[0].name="";
                }


                But this should be done only when you have multiple classes with some common properties and you need a generic method to do some work on those.






                share|improve this answer













                You current example does not makes much sense.



                But one way is to constraint your method's generic type parameter to some interface like:



                public interface ITemp
                {
                int code { get; set; }
                string name {get; set;}
                }


                and your specific types would be inheriting it with some implementation



                public class Temp : ITemp
                {
                // implementation
                }


                and then you can write a generic method :



                public void modify<T>(ref IList<T> list) where T : ITemp
                {
                list[0].code=0;
                list[0].name="";
                }


                But this should be done only when you have multiple classes with some common properties and you need a generic method to do some work on those.







                share|improve this answer












                share|improve this answer



                share|improve this answer










                answered Dec 31 '18 at 7:36









                Ehsan SajjadEhsan Sajjad

                50.4k1067123




                50.4k1067123






























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