convert List<List<object>> to IList<IList<object>>
You can't perform that conversion via straight casting - it wouldn't be safe. Instead, you should use:
IList<IList<object>> ret = new List<IList<object>>();
Then for each "sublist" you can use:
// Or whatever
ret.Add(new List<object>());
Finally, just return ret
.
You could use LINQ to perform the conversion of your existing List<List<object>>
when you return it - but it would be better to just create a more appropriate type to start with, as shown above.
To understand why some of the existing answers are wrong, suppose you could do this:
IList<IList<object>> p = new List<List<object>>();
Then this would be valid:
List<List<object>> listOfLists = new List<List<object>>();
IList<IList<object>> p = listOfLists;
p.Add(new object[]);
List<object> list = p[0];
But p[0]
is a reference to an object[]
, not a List<object>
... our supposedly type-safe code doesn't look as safe any more...
Fortunately, IList<T>
is invariant to prevent exactly this problem.
You would have to declare your list as
IList<IList<object>> list = new List<IList<object>>(); // Works!
This works, because only the outer list is created in the first place. You can then insert individual items that are compatible with IList<object>
:
list.Add(new List<object>());
list.Add(new object[10]);
var myOriginalList = new List<List<Object>>();
var converted = ((IList<IList<Object>>)myOriginalList.Cast<IList<Object>>().ToList()); // EDIT: Added .ToList() here
You shouldn't need to convert back- you can do just about anything on IList
that you could on List
.