At the moment I use List<int> ints = tuple.Item2.Select(s => s.Value).ToList()
but this looks inefficient when tuple.Item2 has 1000's of items. Any better way to achieve this? except using a for loop.
2 Answers
The built-in way to convert each element in one List<T1>
and store the result in another List<T2>
is List<T1>.ConvertAll
.
List<int> ints = tuple.Item2.ConvertAll(s => s.Value);
Unlike .Select(...).ToList()
or .Cast(...).ToList()
, this method knows the list size in advance, and prevents unnecessary reallocations that .ToList()
cannot avoid.
For this to work, tuple.Item2
must really be a List<int?>
. It's not an extension method, it cannot work on the generic IEnumerable<int?>
interface.
-
It could be that
s => s.GetValueOrDefault()
is faster than justs => s.Value
. This may seem surprising, but the reason is that.GetValueOrDefault()
always and unconditionally exposes the backing field (value
), while the.Value
property first checks the Boolean field (hasValue
) to see if it is true or false, and only then exposes that backing field (or throws ifhasValue
was false). TheNullable<>
struct ensures that the backing field always has its default value in the case where we are modeling a "null", so that is why the behavior of.GetValueOrDefault()
is safe. Apr 16, 2022 at 8:39 -
you can simply use Linq Cast<>
to achieve this .
List<int> ints = tuple.Item2.Cast<int>();
but if an element cannot be cast to type TResult, this method will throw an exception.you have to consider catching exception.
-
2+1 but what about efficiency? You cannot do better than O(n) with cast anyway, I think. And you have to do
.Where(x => x.HasValue)
to check nulls Dec 6, 2012 at 6:38 -
2
-
1Also this is slower than the original code by a factor of 3 for 200000 items. Dec 6, 2012 at 6:39
-
@mikez: Really? It looks better than original. I assume built in extension method would be faster. I will test this.– JackDec 6, 2012 at 6:41
-
@RomanPekar & mike you are right.but i have suggested the way to deceive some one it is efficient :) Dec 6, 2012 at 6:41
s.HasValue == false
...