Returns the last item in the Data Set.
public DicomElement GetLastElement(
DicomElement element,
bool tree,
bool includeVolatile
)
Public Function GetLastElement( _
ByVal element As Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement, _
ByVal tree As Boolean, _
ByVal includeVolatile As Boolean _
) As Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement
public Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement GetLastElement(
Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement element,
bool tree,
bool includeVolatile
)
public DicomElement getLastElement(DicomElement element, boolean tree, boolean includeVolatile)
function Leadtools.Dicom.DicomDataSet.GetLastElement(
element ,
tree ,
includeVolatile
)
public:
Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement^ GetLastElement(
Leadtools.Dicom.DicomElement^ element,
bool tree,
bool includeVolatile
)
element
An item in the Data Set.
tree
true to evaluate the Data Set as a tree; false to evaluate the Data Set as a list.
includeVolatile
true to retrieve the last element, volatile or non-volatile; false to retrieve the last non-volatile element.
The last item in the Data Set, or a null reference (Nothing in VB) if the Data Set is empty.
If the Data Set is evaluated as a tree structure, this method returns the last item on the same level as element with the same parent as element. Please note that the numbering of the items in the following illustration is arbitrary and does not imply order.
If the passed object points to: | The method returns an object pointing to: |
---|---|
Item 1 | Item 2 |
Item 3 | Item 4 |
Item 5 | Item 5 |
Item 6 | Item 7 |
null | Item 2 |
If the Data Set is evaluated as a list, the last item in the list is returned. Please note that the numbering of the items in the following illustration does indicate the order of the items when the Data Set is evaluated as a list.
If the passed object points to: | The method returns an object pointing to: |
---|---|
null | Item 30 |
Item 12 | Item 30 |
Item 14 | Item 30 |
Item 22 | Item 30 |
Item 25 | Item 30 |
The following methods will also help you navigate the Data Set as either a tree or a list:
If you evaluate the Data Set as a tree, you can also use the following methods to navigate the tree:
A volatile element is an element that can be changed or destroyed in the process of inserting or setting an image. A non-volatile element is an element that must be changed manually. It is not changed or destroyed by inserting or setting an image.
For example, a grayscale image has elements DicomTag.SmallestImagePixelValue, DicomTag.LargestImagePixelValue, etc. If the image is changed to a color image, these elements disappear and the following elements appear: DicomTag.RedPaletteColorLookupTableDescriptor, etc. These are volatile elements since they are changed or destroyed when an image is changed or set.
To retrieve the last element that must be changed manually, i.e., is not volatile, set includeVolatile to false. To retrieve the first element, either volatile or non-volatile, set includeVolatile to true.
For an example, refer to Load.
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