Strokes.CopyTo Method
Strokes.CopyTo Method |
Copies all of the elements of the current Strokes collection to the specified one-dimensional array, starting at the specified destination array index.
Definition
Visual Basic .NET Public Sub CopyTo( _
ByVal array As Array, _
ByVal index As Integer _
)C# public void CopyTo(
Array array,
int index
);Managed C++ public: void CopyTo(
Array *array,
int *index
);
Parameters
array System.Array. The one-dimensional array that is the destination of elements copied from the collection. The array must have zero-based indexing. index System.Int32. The zero-based index in the array parameter at which copying begins.
Remarks
The elements are copied to the Array object in the same order in which the enumerator iterates through the Strokes.
An exception is thrown if:
- The array parameter is a null (Nothing in Microsoft® Visual Basic® .NET) reference.
- The index parameter is less than zero.
- The array parameter is multidimensional.
- The index parameter is equal to or greater than the length of the array parameter.
- The number of elements in the collection is higher than the available space from the index parameter to the end of the destination array parameter.
The type of the collection is cast automatically to the type of the destination array parameter. However, this method only copies elements to arrays of the same type as the elements of the collection or arrays of type Object . Attempting to copy to another type of array causes an InvalidCastException exceptionto be thrown.
This method is not synchronized.
Examples
[C#]
This C# example fills part of an array of Stroke objects with the entire contents of the InkCollector.Ink.Strokes collection, starting at element
1
(the second element in a zero-based array) of the destination array theCopies and leaving the first element of the destination array (with an index of0
) empty.Stroke[] theCopies = new Stroke[theInkCollector.Ink.Strokes.Count + 1]; theInkCollector.Ink.Strokes.CopyTo(theCopies, 1);
[VB.NET]
This Visual Basic .NET example fills part of an array of Stroke objects with the entire contents of the InkCollector.Ink.Strokes collection, starting at element
1
(the second element in a zero-based array) of the destination array theCopies and leaving the first element of the destination array (with an index of0
) empty.Dim theCopies(e.Stroke.ExtendedProperties.Count) As Stroke e.Stroke.ExtendedProperties.CopyTo(theCopies, 1)