vote up 13 vote down star
8

I have a array of integers: int [] number = new int[] { 2,3,6,7 };

What is the easiest way of converting these in to a single string where the number are separated by a character (like: "2,3,4,7")?

I'm in C# and .NET 3.5.

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SO rocks! I got these 3 excellent answers within 10 minutes on a Sunday! – Riri Sep 28 '08 at 13:54

7 Answers

vote up 26 vote down check
var ints = new int[] {1, 2, 3, 4, 5};
var result = string.Join(",", ints.Select(x => x.ToString()).ToArray());
Console.WriteLine(result); // prints "1, 2, 3, 4, 5"

EDIT:

I see several solutions advertise usage of StringBuilder. Someone complaints that Join method should take an IEnumerable argument.

I'm going to disappoint you :) String.Join requires array for a single reason - performance. Join method needs to know the size of the data to effectively preallocate necessary amount of memory.

Here is a part of internal implementation of String.Join method:

// length computed from length of items in input array and length of separator
string str = FastAllocateString(length);
fixed (char* chRef = &str.m_firstChar) // note than we use direct memory access here
{
    UnSafeCharBuffer buffer = new UnSafeCharBuffer(chRef, length);
    buffer.AppendString(value[startIndex]);
    for (int j = startIndex + 1; j <= num2; j++)
    {
        buffer.AppendString(separator);
        buffer.AppendString(value[j]);
    }
}

I'm too lazy to compare performance of suggested methods. But something tells me that Join will win :)

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This is probably the best bet using core .NET extension methods, but I really wished string.Join() would accept an IEnumerable<string> to avoid the ToArray() conversion. – spoulson Sep 28 '08 at 14:43
Nothing prevent someone from overloading string.Join to take an IEnumerable, as well. ;) – Robert P Oct 20 '08 at 19:57
This is probably also the easiest solution, and not just the fastest. – Dave Van den Eynde Oct 22 '08 at 10:40
2  
The comment // prints "1, 2, 3, 4, 5" should read // prints "1,2,3,4,5" that is, without the spaces (or, adjust the seperator in the Join-call) – David Schmitt Dec 19 '08 at 11:22
vote up 4 vote down

Although the OP specified .NET 3.5, people wanting to do this in .NET 2.0 with C#2 can do this:

string.Join(",", Array.ConvertAll<int, String>(ints, Convert.ToString));

I find there are a number of other cases where the use of the Convert.xxx functions is a neater alternative to a lambda, although in C#3 the lambda might help the type-inferencing.

A fairly compact C#3 version which works with .NET 2.0 is this:

string.Join(",", Array.ConvertAll(ints, item => item.ToString()))
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vote up 0 vote down

You can do

ints.ToString(",")
ints.ToString("|")
ints.ToString(":")

Check out

Separator Delimited ToString for Array, List, Dictionary, Generic IEnumerable

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1  
This requires the extension method defined on the linked page, this could be clearer – StocksR Jul 15 at 10:32
vote up 2 vote down

I agree with the lambda expression for readability and maintainability, but it will not always be the best option. The downside to using both the IEnumerable/ToArray and StringBuilder approaches is that they have to dynamically grow a list, either of items or characters, since they do not know how much space will be needed for the final string.

If the rare case where speed is more important than conciseness, the following is more efficient.

int[] number = new int[] { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
string[] strings = new string[number.Length];
for (int i = 0; i < number.Length; i++)
  strings[i] = number[i].ToString();
string result = string.Join(",", strings);
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vote up 5 vote down

One mixture of the two approaches would be to write an extension method on IEnumerable<T> which used a StringBuilder. Here's an example, with different overloads depending on whether you want to specify the transformation or just rely on plain ToString. I've named the method "JoinStrings" instead of "Join" to avoid confusion with the other type of Join. Perhaps someone can come up with a better name :)

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;

public static class Extensions
{
    public static string JoinStrings<T>(this IEnumerable<T> source, 
                                        Func<T, string> projection, string separator)
    {
        StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
        bool first = true;
        foreach (T element in source)
        {
            if (first)
            {
                first = false;
            }
            else
            {
                builder.Append(separator);
            }
            builder.Append(projection(element));
        }
        return builder.ToString();
    }

    public static string JoinStrings<T>(this IEnumerable<T> source, string separator)
    {
        return JoinStrings(source, t => t.ToString(), separator);
    }
}

class Test
{

    public static void Main()
    {
        int[] x = {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 10, 11};

        Console.WriteLine(x.JoinStrings(";"));
        Console.WriteLine(x.JoinStrings(i => i.ToString("X"), ","));
    }
}
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Nice solution! You dont need the projection parameter though, you can just write x.Select(i => i.ToString("X")).JoinStrings(";") which is more idiomatic. – olavk Sep 28 '08 at 18:45
Yes, I thought about that afterwards. Occasionally it's nice to be able to specify it all in one go, but it's definitely more elegant to split the operations :) – Jon Skeet Sep 28 '08 at 18:52
vote up 4 vote down

If your array of integers may be large, you'll get better performance using a StringBuilder. E.g.:

StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
char separator = ',';
foreach(int value in integerArray)
{
    if (builder.Length > 0) builder.Append(separator);
    builder.Append(value);
}
string result = builder.ToString();

Edit: When I posted this I was under the mistaken impression that "StringBuilder.Append(int value)" internally managed to append the string representation of the integer value without creating a string object. This is wrong: inspecting the method with Reflector shows that it simply appends value.ToString().

Therefore the only potential performance difference is that this technique avoids one array creation, and frees the strings for garbage collection slightly sooner. In practice this won't make any measurable difference, so I've upvoted this better solution.

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Have you measured it to be faster? String.Join uses a StringBuilder also. – olavk Sep 28 '08 at 14:37
Yes, but you first need to convert the whole thing to an array, which is far from ideal. In particular, it means that you need to have all the converted strings in memory at the same time, before you start building the resulting string. – Jon Skeet Sep 28 '08 at 14:46
OTOH String.Join precalculates the size of the StringBuilder buffer so it avoids resizing. So it might be faster even if it requires more memory. – olavk Sep 28 '08 at 20:08
Actually Join implementation is far better than this code :) – aku Sep 28 '08 at 22:45
vote up 5 vote down
String.Join(";", number.Select(item => item.ToString()).ToArray());

We have to convert each of the items to a String before we can join them, so it makes sense to use Select and a lambda expression. This is equivalent to map in some other languages. Then we have to convert the resulting collection of string back to an array, because String.Join only accepts a string array.

The ToArray() is slightly ugly I think. String.Join should really accept IEnumerable<String>, there is no reason to restrict it to only arrays. This is probably just because Join is from before generics, when arrays were the only kind of typed collection available.

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