C# Class SmartFormat.Extensions.ListFormatter

If the source value is an array (or supports ICollection), then each item will be custom formatted. Syntax: #1: "format|spacer" #2: "format|spacer|last spacer" #3: "format|spacer|last spacer|two spacer" The format will be used for each item in the collection, the spacer will be between all items, and the last spacer will replace the spacer for the last item only. Example: CustomFormat("{Dates:D|; |; and }", {#1/1/2000#, #12/31/2999#, #9/9/9999#}) = "January 1, 2000; December 31, 2999; and September 9, 9999" In this example, format = "D", spacer = "; ", and last spacer = "; and " Advanced: Composite Formatting is allowed in the format by using nested braces. If a nested item is detected, Composite formatting will be used. Example: CustomFormat("{Sizes:{Width}x{Height}|, }", {new Size(4,3), new Size(16,9)}) = "4x3, 16x9" In this example, format = "{Width}x{Height}". Notice the nested braces.
Inheritance: IFormatter, ISource
Show file Open project: scottrippey/SmartFormat.NET Class Usage Examples

Private Properties

Property Type Description

Public Methods

Method Description
ListFormatter ( SmartFormatter formatter ) : System
TryEvaluateFormat ( IFormattingInfo formattingInfo ) : bool
TryEvaluateSelector ( ISelectorInfo selectorInfo ) : bool

This allows an integer to be used as a selector to index an array (or list). This is better described using an example: CustomFormat("{Dates.2.Year}", {#1/1/2000#, #12/31/2999#, #9/9/9999#}) = "9999" The ".2" selector is used to reference Dates[2].

Method Details

ListFormatter() public method

public ListFormatter ( SmartFormatter formatter ) : System
formatter SmartFormatter
return System

TryEvaluateFormat() public method

public TryEvaluateFormat ( IFormattingInfo formattingInfo ) : bool
formattingInfo IFormattingInfo
return bool

TryEvaluateSelector() public method

This allows an integer to be used as a selector to index an array (or list). This is better described using an example: CustomFormat("{Dates.2.Year}", {#1/1/2000#, #12/31/2999#, #9/9/9999#}) = "9999" The ".2" selector is used to reference Dates[2].
public TryEvaluateSelector ( ISelectorInfo selectorInfo ) : bool
selectorInfo ISelectorInfo
return bool