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.ToLookup<TSource, TKey> returns an ILookup<TKey, TSource>. ILookup<TKey, TSource> also implements interface IEnumerable<IGrouping<TKey, TSource>>.

.GroupBy<TSource, TKey> returns an IEnumerable<IGroupking<Tkey, TSource>>.

ILookup has the handy indexer property, so it can be used in a dictionary-like (or lookup-like) manner, whereas GroupBy can't. GroupBy without the indexer is a pain to work with; pretty much the only way you can then reference the return object is by looping through it (or using another LINQ-extension method). In other words, any case that GroupBy works, ToLookup will work as well.

All this leaves me with the question why would I ever bother with GroupBy? Why should it exist?

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GroupBy Is IQuerable, ILookup is not – Magnus Apr 18 '12 at 18:19
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GroupBy doesn't enumerate the list ToLookup enumerates it the same way ToList / ToArray – Aducci Apr 18 '12 at 18:19
@Aducci If you want to continue this, please bring it up on meta.stackoverflow.com – casperOne Apr 18 '12 at 19:46

marked as duplicate by nawfal, Conrad Frix, Jesse, tjameson, tkanzakic 2 days ago

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3 Answers

up vote 27 down vote accepted

why would I ever bother with GroupBy? Why should it exist?

What happens when you call ToLookup on an object representing a remote database table with a billion rows in it?

The billion rows are sent over the wire, and you build the lookup table locally.

What happens when you call GroupBy on such an object?

A query object is built; end of story.

When that query object is enumerated then the analysis of the table is done on the database server and the grouped results are sent back on demand a few at a time.

Logically they are the same thing but the performance implications of each are completely different. Calling ToLookup means I want a cache of the entire thing right now organized by group. Calling GroupBy means "I am building an object to represent the question 'what would these things look like if I organized them by group?'"

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The poster doesn't specifically target an IQueryable<T> representation. Your answer covers that situation, but when it's just plain ol IEnumerable<T> (LINQ-to-Objects) it can seem like there isn't a reason to use one over the other, which is what I believe @Shlomo is trying to get at. Not the IQueryable<T> case, but the LINQ-to-Objects case. – casperOne Apr 18 '12 at 18:33
It strikes me as beneficial for LINQ to be consistent, where possible. I think demonstrating its usefulness in LINQ-to-SQL is sufficient to justify leaving it in LINQ-to-Objects. – Brian Apr 18 '12 at 19:14
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@casperOne: I think you've failed to understand my point. Even in the LINQ-to-objects case, calling GroupBy still does not iterate over the collection. (As Aducci pointed out in the answer which you deleted.) That's a fundamental difference. – Eric Lippert Apr 18 '12 at 19:42
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@EricLippert: But is that just a side effect of the implementation or is it guaranteed that the enumerable will be iterated when you call ToLookup, no matter what changes are made to the implementation? – Will Apr 18 '12 at 19:53
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@Will: You make an excellent point; the documentation does not guarantee that ToLookup is "eager". It probably should note that. – Eric Lippert Apr 18 '12 at 20:20
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The two are similar, but are used in different scenarios. .ToLookup() returns a ready to use object that already has all the groups (but not the group's content) eagerly loaded. On the other hand, .GroupBy() returns a lazy loaded sequence of groups.

Different LINQ providers may have different behaviors for the eager and lazy loading of the groups. With LINQ-to-Object it probably makes little difference, but with LINQ-to-SQL (or LINQ-to-EF, etc.), the grouping operation is performed on the database server rather than the client, and so you may want to do an additional filtering on the group key (which generates a HAVING clause) and then only get some of the groups instead of all of them. .ToLookup() wouldn't allow for such semantics since all items are eagerly grouped.

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In simple LINQ world words:

  • ToLookup() - immediate execution
  • GroupBy() - deffered execution
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