1

Assume that the class Data is defined as {DateTime TransactionDate, int ItemCount}. I get an original IEnumerable containing scattered TransactionDates and ItemCounts and I need to write a method that returns a collection with all the days filled in between the minimum and the maximum days in the original collection.

For instance, if I get:
12/5/2009 15.00
12/7/2009 10.00
12/10/2009 75.00

I need to generate something like this:
12/5/2009 15.00
12/6/2009 0.00
12/7/2009 10.00
12/8/2009 0.00
12/9/2009 0.00
12/10/2009 75.00

Get you give me an elegant way of doing this with c# 3.0?

I have a list of all dates between the minimum and maximum dates. So I assume all I have to do is "foreach" the intersect collection (allDates-existingDates) and insert a new element for each of these. Am I right?

Thanks

4 Answers 4

3

Here's an extension method that should do the job. It's purely based on iterators (IEnumerable<Data>), so it would seem quite a nice approach to me.

public static IEnumerable<Data> FillIn(this IEnumerable<Data> original)
{
    Data lastItem = null;
    foreach (var item in original)
    {
        if (lastItem != null)
        {
            var fakeItem = new DateTime(lastItem.TransactionDate.Year,
                lastItem.TransactionDate.Month, lastItem.TransactionDate.Day)
                .AddDays(1);
            while (fakeItem.TransactionDate != item.TransactionDate)
            {
                yield return fakeItem;
                fakeItem.TransactionDate = fakeItem.TransactionDate.AddDays(1);
            }
        }
        lastItem = item;
        yield return item;
    }
}

Where Data is simply defined as:

class Data
{
    public DateTime TransactionDate;
    public int ItemCount;
}
1
  • You should consider the fact that AddDays works on floats. For that reason I've found it not to be accurate sometimes (i.e. adding 23h59mXXs and not one day).
    – em70
    Jun 12, 2009 at 8:32
1

Assuming your collection is a dictionary (dates are unique and can be used as keys), you could do something lik this:

-1. Determinie the first and last date in your source collection (if the collection is a sortedDictionary you have first and last elements).

-2. Create a IEnumerator that can iterate trough all dates between a given start and end date.

-3. Use a foreach structure, using the Enumerator and the obtained start and end dates you gathered. At each step, check if the current date is a key in the source list, in which case you copy it in the result list, otherwise create a new result item with the current date and 0 for item count.

Let me know of this proof-of-concept is enought for you, if not I will try to build an example.

Edit: You edited your question, mentionig you already have the list of all dates between the start and end so you can skip the 2nd step. :)

1

Assuming you have a List containing all dates in the range from minimum date to maximum date called alldates, you can do the following:

var transactions = new List<Data>(originalData);
transactions.AddRange(from dt in
                      alldates.Except
                          (
                          from t in transactions
                          select t.TransactionDate
                          )
                  select new Data() { TransactionDate = dt, ItemCount = 0 });

where Data is defined as:

class Data
{
    public DateTime TransactionDate { get; set; }
    public int ItemCount { get; set; }
}
0

Use DateTime.AddDays from the first date and fill in the blanks while looping from first to last date?

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