Nota: Este artículo fue publicado originalmente en 2011. Algunos pasos, comandos o versiones de software pueden haber cambiado. Consulta la documentación actual de .Net para la información más reciente.
Requisitos Previos
Antes de comenzar, asegúrate de tener:
- Visual Studio or .NET CLI installed
- .NET Framework or .NET Core SDK
- Basic C# programming knowledge
How to: Initialize a Dictionary with a Collection Initializer
Sometimes in your project you want to initialize a Dictionary or other sort of collection at the declaration level so you don’t have to manually use the .add() methods and write a separate method in which to execute them. A prime example is a dictionary that is going to be static and used across the entire application and you don’t expect it to change. The code below offers an example of how to initialize a dictionary when you’re declaring the variable:
Dictionary<int, StudentInfo> students = new Dictionary<int, StudentInfo>()
{
{ 111, new StudentInfo {FirstName="Sachin", LastName="Karnik", PhoneNumber="123-456-7890"}},
{ 112, new StudentInfo {FirstName="Dina", LastName="Salimzianova", PhoneNumber="123-456-7890"}},
{ 113, new StudentInfo {FirstName="Andy", LastName="Ruth", PhoneNumber="123-456-7890"}}
};
StudentInfo
Resumen
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