Use ordinal StringComparison
Use ordinal StringComparison
Microsoft docsDescription
Many string operations, most importantly the System.String.Compare and System.String.Equals methods, now provide an overload that accepts a System.StringComparison enumeration value as a parameter.
When you specify either StringComparison.Ordinal or StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase, the string comparison is non-linguistic. That is, the features that are specific to the natural language are ignored when comparison decisions are made. Ignoring natural language features means the decisions are based on simple byte comparisons and not on casing or equivalence tables that are parameterized by culture. As a result, by explicitly setting the parameter to either the StringComparison.Ordinal or StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase, your code often gains speed, increases correctness, and becomes more reliable.
Cause
A string comparison operation that is nonlinguistic does not set the System.StringComparison parameter to either Ordinal or OrdinalIgnoreCase.
How to fix violations
To fix a violation of this rule, change the string comparison method to an overload that accepts the System.StringComparison enumeration as a parameter, and specify either Ordinal or OrdinalIgnoreCase. For example, change String.Compare(str1, str2) to String.Compare(str1, str2, StringComparison.Ordinal).
Example
#pragma warning disable CA1309
// The code that's violating the rule is on this line.
#pragma warning restore CA1309When to suppress
It is safe to suppress a warning from this rule when the library or application is intended for a limited local audience, or when the semantics of the current culture should be used.