I've learnt about lazy execution with yield return. Now I've seen a type which was introduced in .Net 4 (Lazy<T>
). My question is: Is there any connection between these? I've checked the methods of Lazy<T>
in ILSpy, but I haven't seen method implementation with yield return. So are they connected at lower levels?
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1Both are monads and have similar semantics. Oh, and theoretically each can be implemented in terms of the other, even though one direction would be very impractical …– Konrad RudolphJun 24, 2013 at 16:18
5 Answers
They have nothing to do with each-other.
Iterator methods (methods which use yield return
, such as LINQ methods) used deferred execution.
That means that the code in the method will not run until you enumerate its results.
Lazy<T>
is a wrapper that will only compute its value when the Value
property is first accessed.
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4So both offer deferred value retrieval. That doesn’t sound like “nothing to do with each other”. Jun 24, 2013 at 16:20
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1They aren't directly related is what he is saying. The yield is a bit more complex since it is primarily utilized in deferred execution. i.e. you may have a loop that calls an enumerable function that utilize the yield, which may short circuit and never fully unwind. The Lazy<T> defers the whole value load in entirety, not partially. Jun 24, 2013 at 16:23
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1Importantly, without further
Lazy
-like caching of the result,yield return
will evaluate the "computation of its value" each time it is enumerated, where asLazy
WILL only evaluate once. Jun 25, 2013 at 2:21
No, they has nothing to do with each other .
yield
is used to return current pointer to an object during iteration. It's very useful on iterating over large data sets and filtering/validating... some data contemporary (during iteration), so you don't need to cache filtered (say) values first, as it will make memory grow unreasonably big.
Lazy, is about a late/lazy or defered initialization, instead . It's all about late intialization of an instance of a type you specify like such.
Example: you have a type, that on initilization allocates a lot of memory, but it's very common case in your application workflow that user will not need that type (some specific, user requested operation), so you use Lazy<T>
, to define a type, but do not initialize
it, so allocate memory only when it actually needed.
You can see that there is no any relation between these concepts.
No - an iterator is intended to serve a different function than Lazy<T>
.
While iterators provide a way to implement IEnumerable<T>
using deferred execution, and provide a form of "laziness", they're intended use case is quite different than Lazy<T>
. Lazy<T>
provides lazy constructor with multiple fetches of the same instance. Iterators, on the other hand, are intended to evaluate and return a sequence of values, not a single value.
Calling a method implemented with an iterator (yield return
) will re-evaulate the sequence each time.
In addition, Lazy<T>
can (optionally) provide thread safety guarantees.
Not really. yield return
is used to implement a method with a return type of IEnumerable<T>
or IEnumerator<T>
. As Lazy<T>
has no methods with such return types clearly iterator blocks aren't used in its implementation.
No, the two doesn't use or depend on each other in any way.
Using yield return
will not use Lazy<T>
.
The point of Lazy<T>
is to defer production of some costly data until (or even if) actually needed.
You can return it to say "if you really need this data, I can go and produce it, but if you don't need it, we've saved some time".