difference between IComparable and IComparer

Raghav55 picture Raghav55 · May 12, 2011 · Viewed 61.3k times · Source

What is the difference between IComparable and IComparer Interfaces? Is it necessary to use this interface always with Array.Sort() method

Answer

nawfal picture nawfal · Dec 6, 2012

As the name suggests, IComparable<T> reads out I'm comparable. IComparable<T> when defined for T lets you compare the current instance with another instance of same type. IComparer<T> reads out I'm a comparer, I compare. IComparer<T> is used to compare any two instances of T, typically outside the scope of the instances of T.

As to what they are for can be confusing at first. From the definition it should be clear that hence IComparable<T> (defined in the class T itself) should be the de facto standard to provide the logic for sorting. The default Sort on List<T> etc relies on this. Implementing IComparer<T> on T doesn't help regular sorting. Subsequently, there is little value for implementing IComparable<T> on any other class other than T. This:

class MyClass : IComparable<T>

rarely makes sense.

On the other hand

class T : IComparable<T>
{
    public int CompareTo(T other)
    {
        //....
    }
}

is how it should be done.

IComparer<T> can be useful when you require sorting based on a custom order, but not as a general rule. For instance, in a class of Person at some point you might require to Sort people based on their age. In that case you can do:

class Person
{
    public int Age;
}

class AgeComparer : IComparer<Person>
{
    public int Compare(Person x, Person y)
    {
        return x.Age - y.Age;
    }
}

Now the AgeComparer helps in sorting a list based on Age.

var people = new Person[] { new Person { age = 23 }, new Person(){ age = 22 } };
people.Sort(p, new AgeComparer()); //person with age 22 comes first now.

Similarly IComparer<T> on T doesn't make sense.

class Person : IComparer<Person>

True this works, but doesn't look good to eyes and defeats logic.

Usually what you need is IComparable<T>. Also ideally you can have only one IComparable<T> while multiple IComparer<T> is possible based on different criteria.

The IComparer<T> and IComparable<T> are exactly analogous to IEqualityComparer<T> and IEquatable<T> which are used for testing equality rather than comparing/sorting; a good thread here where I wrote the exact same answer :)