Hey im trying to create a list of names (with extensions) of all files in the directory, and all files within all, but i need to use a recursive algorithm. Im not sure if im on the right track !!! Quite new to C#
1 Answer
I usually do this sort of thing with a Queue:
// Make sure rootDir exists first...
var files = new List<string>();
var dirs = new Queue<string>();
dirs.Enqueue(rootDir);
while(dirs.Count > 0 ) {
var dir = dirs.Dequeue();
foreach( var fileName in Directory.GetFiles(dir) ) {
files.Add(fileName);
}
foreach( var subDir in Directory.GetDirectories(dir) ) {
dirs.Enqueue(subDir);
}
}
// Now populate your list with the files collection.
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+1 for not littering the Stack with useless function calls which cannot be inlined !– Tomer WFeb 28, 2013 at 6:50
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+1 for this pattern. Although I still like recursion more, as I think its easier to follow (shame about the lack of Tail in the C#->CLR compiler). However I prefer to use yield rather than a List.– AronFeb 28, 2013 at 6:59
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Yeah, my actual code that this is based on is implemented as an iterator block - I'm using it to walk a directory structure of about 1,000,000 xml files... Feb 28, 2013 at 7:04
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2+1. This is educational. Also simply using SearchOption.AllDirectories will achieve the same with less code, including iterator version Directory.EnumerateFiles (4.0+). Feb 28, 2013 at 7:04
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1Actually thinking a little deeper about this example, I think, assuming I ignore Alexei (great shout by the way). That I would divide the problem into two function. "Recursive get all Directories" and "Enumerate each file in a directory". Switch to using Enumerable GetFile/GetDirectory. Reason being is that you can get the first result faster when using concurrency.– AronFeb 28, 2013 at 7:09
Recursive
means that your method calls itself in some way.FileInfo[] files = pi.GetFiles("*", SearchOption.AllDirectories);
? "Easy" and "recursive" together in one sentence... ^_^