I'm splitting a list of (in this example) approx. 190000 items into chunks of 5000 items.
so instead of: List<Object>
, count 190000
it becomes: List<List<Object>>
, Count 28(Count 5000))
I do this with the following code:
public static IEnumerable<List<Object>> Split(this IEnumerable<Object> sourceList, int chunkSize)
{
int numberOfLists = (sourceList.Count() / chunkSize) + 1;
List<List<Object>> result = new List<List<object>>();
for (int i = 0; i < numberOfLists; i++)
{
List<Object> subList = new List<Object>();
subList = sourceList.Skip(i * chunkSize).Take(chunkSize).ToList();
result.Add(subList);
}
return result;
}
I call this method (which resides in a helper class) like follows;
var chunkList = (IEnumerable<List<MyObjectClass>>)MyHelper.Split(myObjectList, 5000);
In the above line I explicitly cast the list, that fails in an InvalidCastException. When i use the as operator like follows;
var chunkList = MyHelper.Split(myObjectList, 5000) as IEnumerable<List<MyObjectClass>>;
the result is null.
I expected I could use
List<List<MyObjectClass>> chunkList = MyHelper.Split(myObjectList, 5000) as List<List<MyObjectClass>>
I would like to keep the splitter method as generic as possible. The question is how I can cast the return value correctly. Can someone point out to me how to do this?
Thanks in advance.
var
, to make lines shorter. Hope you're ok with that.sourceList.Count() % chunkSize == 0
you get a spurious empty sub-list at the end.