Array.Copy Method (Array, Int32, Array, Int32, Int32)
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Namespace: System
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Syntax
'Declaration
<SecuritySafeCriticalAttribute> _
Public Shared Sub Copy ( _
sourceArray As Array, _
sourceIndex As Integer, _
destinationArray As Array, _
destinationIndex As Integer, _
length As Integer _
)
[SecuritySafeCriticalAttribute]
public static void Copy(
Array sourceArray,
int sourceIndex,
Array destinationArray,
int destinationIndex,
int length
)
Parameters
- sourceArray
Type: System.Array
The Array that contains the data to copy.
- sourceIndex
Type: System.Int32
A 32-bit integer that represents the index in the sourceArray at which copying begins.
- destinationArray
Type: System.Array
The Array that receives the data.
- destinationIndex
Type: System.Int32
A 32-bit integer that represents the index in the destinationArray at which storing begins.
- length
Type: System.Int32
A 32-bit integer that represents the number of elements to copy.
Exceptions
Exception | Condition |
---|---|
ArgumentNullException | sourceArray is nulla null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic). -or- destinationArray is nulla null reference (Nothing in Visual Basic). |
RankException | sourceArray and destinationArray have different ranks. |
ArrayTypeMismatchException | sourceArray and destinationArray are of incompatible types. |
InvalidCastException | At least one element in sourceArray cannot be cast to the type of destinationArray. |
ArgumentOutOfRangeException | sourceIndex is less than the lower bound of the first dimension of sourceArray. -or- destinationIndex is less than the lower bound of the first dimension of destinationArray. -or- length is less than zero. |
ArgumentException | length is greater than the number of elements from sourceIndex to the end of sourceArray. -or- length is greater than the number of elements from destinationIndex to the end of destinationArray. |
Remarks
The sourceArray and destinationArray parameters must have the same number of dimensions.
When copying between multidimensional arrays, the array behaves like a long one-dimensional array, where the rows (or columns) are conceptually laid end-to-end. For example, if an array has three rows (or columns) with four elements each, copying six elements from the beginning of the array would copy all four elements of the first row (or column) and the first two elements of the second row (or column). To start copying from the second element of the third row (or column), sourceIndex must be the upper bound of the first row (or column) plus the length of the second row (or column) plus two.
If sourceArray and destinationArray overlap, this method behaves as if the original values of sourceArray were preserved in a temporary location before destinationArray is overwritten.
[C++]
This method is equivalent to the standard C/C++ function memmove, not memcpy.
The arrays can be reference-type arrays or value-type arrays. Type downcasting is performed, as required.
When copying from a reference-type array to a value-type array, each element is unboxed and then copied. When copying from a value-type array to a reference-type array, each element is boxed and then copied.
When copying from a reference-type or value-type array to an Object array, an Object is created to hold each value or reference and then copied. When copying from an Object array to a reference-type or value-type array and the assignment is not possible, an InvalidCastException is thrown.
If sourceArray and destinationArray are both reference-type arrays or are both arrays of type Object, a shallow copy is performed. A shallow copy of an Array is a new Array containing references to the same elements as the original Array. The elements themselves or anything referenced by the elements are not copied. In contrast, a deep copy of an Array copies the elements and everything directly or indirectly referenced by the elements.
An ArrayTypeMismatchException is thrown if the arrays are of incompatible types. Type compatibility is defined as follows:
A type is compatible with itself.
A value type is compatible with Object and with an interface type implemented by that value type. A value type is considered connected to an interface only if it implements that interface directly. Disconnected types are not compatible.
Two intrinsic (predefined) value types are compatible if copying from the source type to the destination type is a widening conversion. A widening conversion never loses information, whereas a narrowing conversion can lose information. For example, converting a 32-bit signed integer to a 64-bit signed integer is a widening conversion, and converting a 64-bit signed integer to a 32-bit signed integer is a narrowing conversion. For more information about conversions, see Convert.
A nonintrinsic (user-defined) value type is compatible only with itself.
If every element in sourceArray requires a downcast (for example, from a base class to a derived class or from an interface to an object) and one or more elements cannot be cast to the corresponding type in destinationArray, an InvalidCastException is thrown.
If this method throws an exception while copying, the state of destinationArray is undefined.
This method is an O(n) operation, where n is length.
Examples
The following code example shows how to copy from one Array of type Object to another Array of type integer.
Note: |
---|
To run this example, see Building Examples That Use a Demo Method and a TextBlock Control. |
Public Class Example
Public Shared Sub Demo(ByVal outputBlock As System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock)
' Creates and initializes a new Array of type Int32.
Dim myIntArray As Array = _
Array.CreateInstance(GetType(System.Int32), 5)
Dim i As Integer
For i = myIntArray.GetLowerBound(0) To myIntArray.GetUpperBound(0)
myIntArray.SetValue(i + 1, i)
Next i
' Creates and initializes a new Array of type Object.
Dim myObjArray As Array = _
Array.CreateInstance(GetType(System.Object), 5)
For i = myObjArray.GetLowerBound(0) To myObjArray.GetUpperBound(0)
myObjArray.SetValue(i + 26, i)
Next i
' Displays the initial values of both arrays.
outputBlock.Text &= "Int32 array:" & vbCrLf
PrintValues(outputBlock, myIntArray)
outputBlock.Text &= "Object array:" & vbCrLf
PrintValues(outputBlock, myObjArray)
' Copies the first element from the Int32 array to the Object array.
Array.Copy(myIntArray, myIntArray.GetLowerBound(0), myObjArray, _
myObjArray.GetLowerBound(0), 1)
' Copies the last two elements from the Object array to the Int32 array.
Array.Copy(myObjArray, myObjArray.GetUpperBound(0) - 1, myIntArray, _
myIntArray.GetUpperBound(0) - 1, 2)
' Displays the values of the modified arrays.
outputBlock.Text &= "Int32 array - Last two elements should now be " _
+ "the same as Object array:" & vbCrLf
PrintValues(outputBlock, myIntArray)
outputBlock.Text &= "Object array - First element should now be the " _
+ "same as Int32 array:" & vbCrLf
PrintValues(outputBlock, myObjArray)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintValues(ByVal outputBlock As System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock, ByVal myArr As Array)
Dim myEnumerator As System.Collections.IEnumerator = _
myArr.GetEnumerator()
Dim i As Integer = 0
Dim cols As Integer = myArr.GetLength((myArr.Rank - 1))
While myEnumerator.MoveNext()
If i < cols Then
i += 1
Else
outputBlock.Text &= vbCrLf
i = 1
End If
outputBlock.Text &= String.Format(ControlChars.Tab + "{0}", myEnumerator.Current)
End While
outputBlock.Text &= vbCrLf
End Sub
End Class
' This code produces the following output.
'
' Int32 array:
' 1 2 3 4 5
' Object array:
' 26 27 28 29 30
' Int32 array - Last two elements should now be the same as Object array:
' 1 2 3 29 30
' Object array - First element should now be the same as Int32 array:
' 1 27 28 29 30
using System;
public class Example
{
public static void Demo(System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock outputBlock)
{
// Creates and initializes a new Array of type Int32.
Array myIntArray = Array.CreateInstance(typeof(System.Int32), 5);
for (int i = myIntArray.GetLowerBound(0); i <= myIntArray.GetUpperBound(0); i++)
myIntArray.SetValue(i + 1, i);
// Creates and initializes a new Array of type Object.
Array myObjArray = Array.CreateInstance(typeof(System.Object), 5);
for (int i = myObjArray.GetLowerBound(0); i <= myObjArray.GetUpperBound(0); i++)
myObjArray.SetValue(i + 26, i);
// Displays the initial values of both arrays.
outputBlock.Text += "Int32 array:" + "\n";
PrintValues(outputBlock, myIntArray);
outputBlock.Text += "Object array:" + "\n";
PrintValues(outputBlock, myObjArray);
// Copies the first element from the Int32 array to the Object array.
Array.Copy(myIntArray, myIntArray.GetLowerBound(0), myObjArray, myObjArray.GetLowerBound(0), 1);
// Copies the last two elements from the Object array to the Int32 array.
Array.Copy(myObjArray, myObjArray.GetUpperBound(0) - 1, myIntArray, myIntArray.GetUpperBound(0) - 1, 2);
// Displays the values of the modified arrays.
outputBlock.Text += "Int32 array - Last two elements should now be the same as Object array:" + "\n";
PrintValues(outputBlock, myIntArray);
outputBlock.Text += "Object array - First element should now be the same as Int32 array:" + "\n";
PrintValues(outputBlock, myObjArray);
}
public static void PrintValues(System.Windows.Controls.TextBlock outputBlock, Array myArr)
{
System.Collections.IEnumerator myEnumerator = myArr.GetEnumerator();
int i = 0;
int cols = myArr.GetLength(myArr.Rank - 1);
while (myEnumerator.MoveNext())
{
if (i < cols)
{
i++;
}
else
{
outputBlock.Text += "\n";
i = 1;
}
outputBlock.Text += String.Format("\t{0}", myEnumerator.Current);
}
outputBlock.Text += "\n";
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
Int32 array:
1 2 3 4 5
Object array:
26 27 28 29 30
Int32 array - Last two elements should now be the same as Object array:
1 2 3 29 30
Object array - First element should now be the same as Int32 array:
1 27 28 29 30
*/
Version Information
Silverlight
Supported in: 5, 4, 3
Silverlight for Windows Phone
Supported in: Windows Phone OS 7.1, Windows Phone OS 7.0
XNA Framework
Supported in: Xbox 360, Windows Phone OS 7.0
Platforms
For a list of the operating systems and browsers that are supported by Silverlight, see Supported Operating Systems and Browsers.