Is there an easy way to programmatically determine the number of lines within a text file?
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If you're not too bothered about efficiency, you can simply write:
For a more efficient method you could do:
Edit: In response to questions about efficiency The reason I said the second was more efficient was regarding memory usage, not necessarily speed. The first one loads the entire contents of the file into an array which means it must allocate at least as much memory as the size of the file. The second merely loops one line at a time so it never has to allocate more than one line's worth of memory at a time. This isn't that important for small files, but for larger files it could be an issue (if you try and find the number of lines in a 4GB file on a 32-bit system, for example, where there simply isn't enough user-mode address space to allocate an array this large). In terms of speed I wouldn't expect there to be a lot in it. It's possible that ReadAllLines has some internal optimisations, but on the other hand it may have to allocate a massive chunk of memory. I'd guess that ReadAllLines might be faster for small files, but significantly slower for large files; though the only way to tell would be to measure it with a Stopwatch or code profiler. |
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Thanks... Cool example |
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You can launch the "wc.exe" executable (comes with UnixUtils and does not need installation) run as an external process. It supports different line count methods (like unix vs mac vs windows). |
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This would use less memory, but probably take longer
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If by easy you mean a lines of code that are easy to decipher but per chance inefficient? string[] lines = System.IO.File.RealAllLines($filename); int cnt = lines.Count(); That's prolly the quickest way to know how many lines. You could also do (depending on if you are buffering it in) for large fileswhile (...reads into buffer){ string[] lines = Regex.Split(buffer,System.Enviorment.NewLine); } There are other numerous ways but one of the above are prolly what you'll go with. |
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count the carriage returns/line feeds. I believe in unicode they are still 0x000D and 0x000A respectively. that way you can be as efficient or as inefficient as you want, and decide if you have to deal with both characters or not |
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The easiest:
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You could quickly read it in, and increment a counter, just use a loop to increment, doing nothing with the text. |
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