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I have a C# collection of strings. Each string is a sentence that can appear on a page. I also have a collection of page breaks which is a collection of int's. representing the index where the collection of strings are split to a new page.

Example: Each 10 items in the string collection is a page so the collection of page breaks would be a collection of int's with the values of 10, 20, 30. ...

So if there are 2 pages of strings then there will be 1 item in the page break collection and if there is 1 page then the page break collection would have zero items.

I am trying to create the following function:

List<string> GetPage(List<string> docList, List<int> pageBreakList, int pageNum)
{
    // This function returns a subset of docList - just the page requested
}

I've taken a few stabs at writing this function and keep on coming up with complex if and switch statements to take into account single and two page documents and page numbers being requested outside the range (e.g. last page should be returned if page number is greater than number of pages and first page if page number is 0 or less).

My struggle with this problem leads me to ask the question: Is there a well known pattern or algorithm to address this type of subset query?

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2 Answers

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"Pure" Linq isn't a good fit for this problem. The best fit is to rely on the methods and properties of List(T). There aren't -that- many special cases.

//pageNum is zero-based.
List<string> GetPage(List<string> docList, List<int> pageBreaks, int pageNum)
{

  // 0 page case
  if (pageBreaks.Count != 0)
  {
    return docList;
  }

  int lastPage = pageBreaks.Count;

  //requestedPage is after the lastPage case
  if (requestedPage > lastPage)
  {
    requestedPage = lastPage;
  }


  int firstLine = requestedPage == 0 ? 0  :
      pageBreaks[requestedPage-1];
  int lastLine = requestedPage == lastPage ? docList.Count :
      pageBreaks[requestedPage];

  //lastLine is excluded.  6 - 3 = 3 - 3, 4, 5

  int howManyLines = lastLine - firstLine;

  return docList.GetRange(firstLine, howManyLines);
}

You don't want to replace the .Count property with linq's .Count() method. You don't want to replace the .GetRange() method with linq's .Skip(n).Take(m) methods.

Linq would be a better fit if you wanted to project these collections into other collections:

IEnumerable<Page> pages =
  Enumerable.Repeat(0, 1)
  .Concat(pageBreaks)
  .Select
  (
    (p, i) => new Page()
    {
      PageNumber = i,
      Lines = 
        docList.GetRange(p, ((i != pageBreaks.Count) ? pageBreaks[i] : docList.Count)  - p)
    }
  );
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Would you mind elaborating on why GetRange() is a better option than Skip() and Take()? – Joel Mueller Oct 26 '08 at 21:08
GetRange leverages the internal implementation of List. Skip/Take uses the contract of IEnumerable (which involves enumerating). If the List has a million elements in it, you'll get to elements 950,000 through 950,010 faster using GetRange. – David B Oct 26 '08 at 23:18
"pageBreaks.Count != 0" Do you mean pageBreaks.Count == 0? pageBreaks.Any() is generally preferable: it doesn't require counting. – Jay Bazuzi Oct 27 '08 at 5:45
.Count is a property on List(T) that does not require counting (also does not require allocation of an Enumerator). I think you mean Enumerable.Count() which is a method I'm not using in this post. – David B Oct 27 '08 at 14:51
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Not sure what the list of page breaks is for. I would think of it this way. A collection of strings, a page number, and the size of the page. Then you could do something like:

List<string> strings = ...
int pageNum = ...
int pageSze = ...

if (pageNum < 1) pageNum = 1;
if (pageSize < 1) pageSize = 1;

List<string> pageOfStrings = strings.Skip( pageSize*(pageNum-1) ).Take( pageSize ).ToList();

In the case where the number of pages vary per page as per your comment, try something like below. You may need to adjust the edge condition checking...

List<string> strings = ...
List<int> sizes = ...

int pageNum = ...
int itemsToSkip =  0;
int itemsToTake = 1;

if (pageNum > 1)
{
   sizes.Take( pageNum - 2).Sum();

   if (pageNum <= sizes.Count)
   {
       itemsToTake = sizes[pageNum-1]
   }
{

List<string> pageOfStrings = strings.Skip( itemsToSkip ).Take( itemsToTake );
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Yep, was going to answer this. The paging pattern in Linq is implemented by the Skip and Take methods. if i is the number of items in a page, and j is the number of the page you wish to view, you would skip i * (j-1) items and take i. – Will Oct 26 '08 at 18:07
That's a great answer but the number of lines per page can vary on each page so the page break collection is an index into where each line that starts a new page is. – Guy Oct 26 '08 at 18:55
This variable page solution has some merit. First page is bugged and an assignment is missing. – David B Oct 27 '08 at 0:31

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