Creating a synchronized wrapper for a SortedList object in C#



To create a synchronized wrapper for a SortedList object, the code is as follows −

Example

 Live Demo

using System; using System.Collections; public class Demo {    public static void Main(){       SortedList sortedList = new SortedList();       sortedList.Add("1", "Tom");       sortedList.Add("2", "Ryan");       sortedList.Add("3", "Nathan");       Console.WriteLine("SortedList elements...");       foreach(DictionaryEntry d in sortedList){          Console.WriteLine("Key = "+d.Key + ", Value = " + d.Value);       }       SortedList sortedList2 = SortedList.Synchronized(sortedList);       Console.WriteLine("SortedList is synchronized? = "+sortedList2.IsSynchronized);    } }

Output

This will produce the following output −

SortedList elements... Key = 1, Value = Tom Key = 2, Value = Ryan Key = 3, Value = Nathan SortedList is synchronized? = True

Example

Let us now see another example −

 Live Demo

using System; using System.Collections; public class Demo {    public static void Main(){       SortedList sortedList = new SortedList();       sortedList.Add("1", "AB");       sortedList.Add("2", "CD");       sortedList.Add("3", "EF");       sortedList.Add("4", "GH");       sortedList.Add("5", "IJ");       sortedList.Add("6", "KL");       Console.WriteLine("SortedList elements...");       foreach(DictionaryEntry d in sortedList){          Console.WriteLine("Key = "+d.Key + ", Value = " + d.Value);       }       Console.WriteLine("SortedList is synchronized? = "+sortedList.IsSynchronized);    } }

Output

This will produce the following output −

SortedList elements... Key = 1, Value = AB Key = 2, Value = CD Key = 3, Value = EF Key = 4, Value = GH Key = 5, Value = IJ Key = 6, Value = KL SortedList is synchronized? = False
Updated on: 2019-12-10T12:02:00+05:30

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