2

I have the following code which I am trying to speed up:

private bool IsValidProduct(string productName)
        {
            return (productName.IndexOf("something", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1 &&
                    productName.IndexOf("whatever", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1 &&
                    productName.IndexOf("blah", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1 &&
                    productName.IndexOf("keyword", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1 &&
                    productName.IndexOf("etc...", StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) == -1);
        }

There are around a dozen words that I am checking for currently.

What is the fastest way of doing this?

6
  • 2
    one thing: this is quite readable....I would prefer this above a regex ;) Jan 23, 2011 at 13:53
  • 3
    Have you actually profiled that code as being too slow? Do that first before trying to optimize. Jan 23, 2011 at 13:58
  • 1
    Are you sure it's the bottleneck? Jan 23, 2011 at 14:35
  • 1
    There are timers around various parts of the algorithm and the parts that are taking the most time are the string checking and manipulation. I should point out that this function is called tens of thousands of times as part of a data sanitation class for third party data. As the number of interations increases over time, we have noticed a significant slowing of the process, hence the need to optimise.Any speed gain is more than worth a slight decrease in readability.
    – Paul Hiles
    Jan 23, 2011 at 14:59
  • Have you looked at the page Best Practices for Using Strings in the .NET Framework (msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/dd465121.aspx)?
    – Spaceghost
    Jan 23, 2011 at 16:33

4 Answers 4

5

Regex is not a good idea, try something like this:

List<string> keywords = new List<string>
    {
        "something",
        "whatever",
        "keyword",
        "etc"
    };

return keywords.All(keyword => !productName.Contains(keyword));
3
  • 1
    @Henk Holterman: I mean not a good idea for this issue. OP just want to check if productName contains the keyword. Regex is overkill.
    – Cheng Chen
    Jan 23, 2011 at 14:29
  • Where is the overkill? If the list is configurable than this looks better. For a hardcoded list I think my RegEx is more readable. Jan 23, 2011 at 14:34
  • You need a ToLowerInvariant() on productName Jan 23, 2011 at 14:34
2

There are around a dozen words that I am checking for currently.

I think that means you don't really have a performance problem.

But a regex solution would look like :

var r = new Regex("something|whatever|blah", RegexOptions.IgnoreCase);
return ! r.ismatch(productName);

Which is at least as readable in my opinion. And I'm sure it's faster but you will have to profile.

For performance, you would have to cache & re-use the RegEx instance. Creating it is the expensive part.

1
  • If you really want to use regex and you want speed then consider creating the regex at class scope. See this for more details: acorns.com.au/blog/?p=136
    – Spaceghost
    Jan 23, 2011 at 15:41
2

You could transform productName to lower case and then use .Contains. Should be a bit faster. Since you're using invariant culture this should work(With some cultures it doesn't).

string lowerProductName=productName.ToLowerInvariant();
return !(lowerProductName.Contains("1")||
         lowerProductName.Contains("2"));

There are some techniques to make it much faster, but it's unlikely you need them. And they are more complicated to implement. Especially since you only have a few short keywords.

But I agree with Cody that you should profile first and find out if it's really this code that's slowing you down.

0

What about using an implementation of Rabin-Karp which is intended to search for a set of keywords in a target text?

Or what Boyer-Moore which is the gold standard for fast string search but will only search for a single string at a time?

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