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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T17:04:18+00:00 2026-05-13T17:04:18+00:00

I have a dictionary. Dictionary<YMD, object> cache = new Dictionary<YMD, object>(); The YMD class

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I have a dictionary.

Dictionary<YMD, object> cache = new Dictionary<YMD, object>();

The YMD class is one of my inventions, it is a class containing only the year, month, and date. The purpose is that the data will be indexed by the day is relates to. Anyhow, I have implemented the Equals() and CompareTo() functions, as well as the == and != operators.

Despite this, the Dictionary.ContainsKey() function will always return false, even if the key exists.

I immediately thought my comparison functions must be broken, but after writing unit tests for all of them it does not appear to be the case.

Is there something about the dictionary class that I do not know?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T17:04:18+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 5:04 pm

    With a dictionary, GetHashCode() is critical. For things that are equal (Equals() == true) it must return the same number (but it is permitted to have collisions – i.e. two items can return the same number by coincidence but not be considered equals).

    Additionally – the hash-code must not change while the item is in the dictionary. Hashing on readonly values are good for this, but alternatively: just don’t change it! For example, if your equals / hashcode spans an entities Name and Id (say), then don’t change those properties of the object, or you may never see that record again (even if you pass in the same instance as the key).

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