I use +
when I know how many strings are going to be concatenated - but what if you just have an array? In that case you wouldn't know how many times to apply +
, so you'd have to call a method (or loop yourself, which is horrible).
I can't remember calling string.Concat
very often though - it's a definite rarity.
As guffa says, +
compiles down into calls to string.Concat
anyway - it's worth being aware that string
doesn't actually have a + operator, which can be a cause of confusion if you ever try to use it in reflection!
One benefit of +
though is that if all the arguments are constant expressions, the compiler will perform the concatenation for you, so you don't need to do it at execution time. That sort of tiny performance benefit isn't going to be significant in most code, but it's always nice when the code I find most readable also has a performance advantage :)