String has a convenient String.IsNullOrEmpty method for checking whether a string is null or has zero length. Is there something similar in out-of-the-box .net?
3 Answers
There is not, but I think you can write your own extension method for that.
public static bool IsNullOrEmpty(this ICollection collection)
{
if (collection == null)
return true;
return collection.Count < 1;
}
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+1, but note that
ICollection<T>
does not inherit fromICollection
, so you might want to make two extension methods, one for each interface.– phoogAug 3, 2012 at 5:06 -
why not use Any instead of Count so that we can avoid iterating the whole list? Aug 5, 2012 at 22:26
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1@LouisRhys Did you notice the Count is missing the brackets? This is not the Count() extension method, it is the Count property so it will not enumerate the entire list. Aug 6, 2012 at 2:06
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@LouisRhys, ICollection doesn't have
Any
Extension method, also the above code is usingCount
property. You may wanna see this thread: Count Vs Any()– HabibAug 6, 2012 at 3:15
This is a more generic extension method that will work on any IEnumerable.
public static bool IsNullOrEmpty(this IEnumerable collection)
{
return collection == null || !collection.Cast<object>().Any();
}
I'm not a big fan of functions that return true if something is empty, I always find most of the time I need to add a ! to the front of string.IsNullOrEmptyString. I would write it as "ExistsAndHasItems" or something like that.
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2why do you have Cast<object>? Why not just make the signature IEnumerable<T>? Aug 5, 2012 at 22:25
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@LouisRhys That is a good question. The idea was to make it as generic as possible. Since IEnumerable<T> inherits from IEnumerable, making it IEnumerable will allow it to work for IEnumerable<T> anyway so allow it to work with the greatest number of collections. Aug 6, 2012 at 2:05