For me the extension feels a little bit more intuitive on int, you no longer need to instantiate a Stopwatch or worry about resetting it.
So you have:
static class BenchmarkExtension {
public static void Times(this int times, string description, Action action) {
Stopwatch watch = new Stopwatch();
watch.Start();
for (int i = 0; i < times; i++) {
action();
}
watch.Stop();
Console.WriteLine("{0} ... Total time: {1}ms ({2} iterations)",
description,
watch.ElapsedMilliseconds,
times);
}
}
With the sample usage of:
var randomStrings = Enumerable.Range(0, 10000)
.Select(_ => Guid.NewGuid().ToString())
.ToArray();
50.Times("Add 10,000 random strings to a Dictionary",
() => {
var dict = new Dictionary<string, object>();
foreach (var str in randomStrings) {
dict.Add(str, null);
}
});
50.Times("Add 10,000 random strings to a SortedList",
() => {
var list = new SortedList<string, object>();
foreach (var str in randomStrings) {
list.Add(str, null);
}
});
Sample output:
Add 10,000 random strings to a Dictionary ... Total time: 144ms (50 iterations)
Add 10,000 random strings to a SortedList ... Total time: 4088ms (50 iterations)