Lazy evaluation is a great boon for stuff like processing huge files that will not fit in main memory at one go. However, suppose there are some elements in the sequence that I want evaluated immediately, while the rest can be lazily computed - is there any way to specify that?
Specific problem: (in case that helps to answer the question)
Specifically, I am using a series of IEnumerables as iterators for multiple sequences - these sequences are data read from files opened using BinaryReader streams (each sequence is responsible for the reading in of data from one of the files). The MoveNext() on these is to be called in a specific order. Eg. iter0 then iter1 then iter5 then iter3 .... and so on. This order is specified in another sequence index = {0,1,5,3,....}. However sequences being lazy, the evaluation is naturally done only when required. Hence, the file reads (for the sequences right at the beginning that read from files on disk) happens as the IEnumerables for a sequence are moving. This is causing an illegal file access - a file that is being read by one process is accessed again (as per the error msg).
True, the illegal file access could be for other reasons, and after having tried my best to debug other causes a partially lazy evaluation might be worth trying out.
FileShare.Read. – Daniel Jul 3 '12 at 14:50|> Seq.cache...? – Stephen Swensen Jul 3 '12 at 14:59fopen("foo.bar","r")made me forget thatFileMode.Opendoesn't mean others can read. – AruniRC Jul 4 '12 at 6:13