Msdn says string.Equals() overrides the string == operator.
Msdn also says it's an ordinal comparison, blah blah.
The thing I'd like to know: Ordinal string comparison tends to be an expensive
thing to do. This can be skipped under certain circumstances, such as, if
ReferenceEquals returns true, or if the two string length's are different.
Can anybody authoritatively say, under the hood, that .Net or mono actually do
this sort of acceleration in the string.Equals() method?
public static bool operator ==( string a, string b)
{
if ( Object.ReferenceEquals(a,b) )
return true;
else
{
if ( a.Length != b.Length )
return false;
else
{
for ( int i=0; i<a.Length ; i++
)
if ( a[i] !=
b[i] )
return false;
return true;
}
}
}
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