Determines whether two Object instances are equal.
Determines whether the specified Object is equal to the current Object.
Supported by the .NET Compact Framework.
[Visual Basic] Overloads Public Overridable Function Equals(Object) As Boolean
[C#] public virtual bool Equals(object);
[C++] public: virtual bool Equals(Object*);
[JScript] public function Equals(Object) : Boolean;
Determines whether the specified Object instances are considered equal.
[Visual Basic] Overloads Public Shared Function Equals(Object, Object) As Boolean
[C#] public static bool Equals(object, object);
[C++] public: static bool Equals(Object*, Object*);
[JScript] public static function Equals(Object, Object) : Boolean;
[C#, JScript] The following code example compares different objects.
[C#, JScript] Note This example shows how to use one of the overloaded versions of Equals. For other examples that might be available, see the individual overload topics.
[C#] using System; public class MyClass { public static void Main() { string s1 = "Tom"; string s2 = "Carol"; Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(\"{0}\", \"{1}\") => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals(s1, s2)); s1 = "Tom"; s2 = "Tom"; Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(\"{0}\", \"{1}\") => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals(s1, s2)); s1 = null; s2 = "Tom"; Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(null, \"{1}\") => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals(s1, s2)); s1 = "Carol"; s2 = null; Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(\"{0}\", null) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals(s1, s2)); s1 = null; s2 = null; Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(null, null) => {2}", s1, s2, Object.Equals(s1, s2)); } } /* This code produces the following output. Object.Equals("Tom", "Carol") => False Object.Equals("Tom", "Tom") => True Object.Equals(null, "Tom") => False Object.Equals("Carol", null) => False Object.Equals(null, null) => True */ [JScript] import System package Equals0 { public class MyClass { public static function Main() { var s1 : String = "Tom"; var s2 : String = "Carol"; var array : Object [] = new Object[3]; array[0] = s1; array[1] = s2; array[2] = System.Object.Equals(s1, s2); Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals('{0}', '{1}') => {2}", array); s1 = "Tom"; s2 = "Tom"; array[0] = s1; array[1] = s2; array[2] = System.Object.Equals(s1, s2); Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals('{0}', '{1}') => {2}", array); s1 = null; s2 = "Tom"; array[0] = s1; array[1] = s2; array[2] = System.Object.Equals(s1, s2); Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(null, '{1}') => {2}", array); s1 = "Carol"; s2 = null; array[0] = s1; array[1] = s2; array[2] = System.Object.Equals(s1, s2); Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals('{0}', null) => {2}", array); s1 = null; s2 = null; array[0] = s1; array[1] = s2; array[2] = System.Object.Equals(s1, s2); Console.WriteLine("Object.Equals(null, null) => {2}", array); } } } Equals0.MyClass.Main(); /* This code produces the following output. Object.Equals("Tom", "Carol") => False Object.Equals("Tom", "Tom") => True Object.Equals(null, "Tom") => False Object.Equals("Carol", null) => False Object.Equals(null, null) => True */
[Visual Basic, C++] No example is available for Visual Basic or C++. To view a C# or JScript example, click the Language Filter button
in the upper-left corner of the page.