Term | Definition |
---|---|
Runtime | A collection of services that are required to execute a given compiled unit of code. |
Common Language Runtime (CLR) | Primarily locates, loads, and managed .NET objects. The CLR also handles memory management, application hosting, coordination of threads, performaing security checks, and other low-level details. |
Managed code | Code that compiles and runs on .NET runtime. C#/F#/VB are examples. |
Unmanaged code | Code that compiles straight to machine code and cannot be directly hosted by the .NET runtime. Contains no free memory management, garbage collection, etc. DLLs created from C/C++ are examples. |
C# Cheat Sheet
C# quick reference cheat sheet that provides basic syntax and methods.
Misc
General .NET Terms
C Strings
Member Example
// Using property of System.String string lengthOfString = "How long?"; lengthOfString.Length // => 9 // Using methods of System.String lengthOfString.Contains("How"); // => true
Verbatim strings
string longString = @"I can type any characters in here !#@$%^&\*()\_\_+ '' \n \t except double quotes and I will be taken literally. I even work with multiple lines.";
String Members
Member | Description |
---|---|
Length | A property that returns the length of the string. |
Compare() | A static method that compares two strings. |
Contains() | Determines if the string contains a specific substring. |
Equals() | Determines if the two strings have the same character data. |
Format() | Formats a string via the {0} notation and by using other primitives. |
Trim() | Removes all instances of specific characters from trailing and leading characters. Defaults to removing leading and trailing spaces. |
Split() | Removes the provided character and creates an array out of the remaining characters on either side. |
String interpolation
string first = "John"; string last = "Doe"; string name = $"{first} {last}"; Console.WriteLine(name); // => John Doe
String concatenation
string first = "John"; string last = "Doe"; string name = first + " " + last; Console.WriteLine(name); // => John Doe
Getting Started
Loops
int[] numbers = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5}; for(int i = 0; i < numbers.Length; i++) { Console.WriteLine(numbers[i]); }
foreach(int num in numbers) { Console.WriteLine(num); }
Arrays
char[] chars = new char[10]; chars[0] = 'a'; chars[1] = 'b'; string[] letters = {"A", "B", "C"}; int[] mylist = {100, 200}; bool[] answers = {true, false};
Conditionals
int j = 10; if (j == 10) { Console.WriteLine("I get printed"); } else if (j > 10) { Console.WriteLine("I don't"); } else { Console.WriteLine("I also don't"); }
User Input
Console.WriteLine("Enter number:"); if(int.TryParse(Console.ReadLine(),out int input)) { // Input validated Console.WriteLine($"You entered {input}"); }
Comments
// Single-line comment /\* Multi-line comment \*/ // TODO: Adds comment to a task list in Visual Studio /// Single-line comment used for documentation /\*\* Multi-line comment used for documentation \*\*/
Primitive Data Types
Data Type | Size | Range |
---|---|---|
int | 4 bytes | -231 to 231-1 |
long | 8 bytes | -263 to 263-1 |
float | 4 bytes | 6 to 7 decimal digits |
double | 8 bytes | 15 decimal digits |
decimal | 16 bytes | 28 to 29 decimal digits |
char | 2 bytes | 0 to 65535 |
bool | 1 bit | true / false |
string | 2 bytes per char | N/A |
Variables
int intNum = 9; long longNum = 9999999; float floatNum = 9.99F; double doubleNum = 99.999; decimal decimalNum = 99.9999M; char letter = 'D'; bool @bool = true; string site = "quickref.me"; var num = 999; var str = "999"; var bo = false;
Hello.cs
class Hello { // main method static void Main(string[] args) { // Output: Hello, world! Console.WriteLine("Hello, world!"); } }
Compiling and running (make sure you are in the project directory)
$ dotnet run Hello, world!