31

Given a collection of items, how do I split the collection into 2 sub-collections based on a predicate?

You could do 2 Where searches, but then the run time is 2*N (which, while still O(n), takes twice as long and is obviously not preferred)

IEnumerable<int> even = nums.Where(i => IsEven(i));
IEnumerable<int> odd = nums.Where(i => !IsEven(i));

You could do a single linear pass yourself (refactored into an extension method here), but this means you have to drag this code all over, and more custom code makes things less maintainable.

public static void SplitOnPred<T>(
        this IEnumerable<T> collection,
        Func<T, bool> pred,
        out IEnumerable<T> trueSet,
        out IEnumerable<T> falseSet
    ) {
        List<T> trueSetList = new List<T>();
        List<T> falseSetList = new List<T>();
        foreach( T item in collection ) {
            if( pred( item ) ) {
                trueSetList.Add( item );
            } else {
                falseSetList.Add( item );
            }
        }
        trueSet = trueSetList;
        falseSet = falseSetList;
}

Question: Does LINQ have any native support for splitting a collection in 1 linear pass?

3
  • Why you need one linear path? Aug 13, 2012 at 17:04
  • 4
    @SaeedAmiri its not really a requirement, and 2 linear passes is good enough in most cases but I'm never really happy with good enough performance :P
    – James
    Aug 13, 2012 at 17:06
  • Would be nice to do something like: even, odd = array.Split(a => a.isOdd?)
    – BenKoshy
    Nov 8, 2022 at 7:32

4 Answers 4

30

Does LINQ have any native support for splitting a collection in 1 linear pass?

There are no built-in methods that split a collection into two versions based on a predicate. You would need to use your own method, similar to the one you posted.

The closest built-in method would be GroupBy (or ToLookup). You could group by odd or even:

var groups = nums.GroupBy(i => IsEven(i));

This will split into two "groups" based on whether the numbers are odd or even.

13

Reed Copsey's answer mentions ToLookup, and that seems attractive.

var lookup = nums.ToLookup(IsEven);

where IsEven is a static method with the expected signature and return type. Then

IEnumerable<int> even = lookup[true];
IEnumerable<int> odd = lookup[false];
6

Well if the logic is esclusive, in your case, you can do like

var list = new List<int> {1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10};    
var result = list.GroupBy(x=> x%2==0);

and in result

foreach(var r in result)
{
    if(r.Key)
     //EVEN
    else 
     //ODD
}
1

If you want to support deferred execution, use a function or extension like this:

IEnumerable<T> Split<T>(this IEnumerable<T> source, out IEnumerable<T> odd)
{
   IList<T> oddCollector = new List<T>();
   Bool odd = true;
   foreach(T item in source)
   {
      if(odd)
      {
          oddCollector.Add(item);
      }
      else
      {
          yield return item;
      }
      odd = !odd;
   }
 }

My apologies for any small compiler error, i did this from the top of my head. Instead of even/odd, you can add a predicate.

1
  • 1
    WARNING This only supports deferred execution if you either read even first, or read the two enumerables in alternating order. If you read odd first you won't get all of the results.
    – csauve
    Nov 11, 2016 at 16:40

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