vote up 3 vote down star
1

I am looking for a very fast way to filter down a collection in C#. I am currently using generic List<object> collections, but am open to using other structures if they perform better.

Currently, I am just creating a new List<object> and looping thru the original list. If the filtering criteria matches, I put a copy into the new list.

Is there a better way to do this? Is there a way to filter in place so there is no temporary list required?

flag

62% accept rate

9 Answers

vote up 14 vote down check

If you're using C# 3.0 you can use linq, way better and way more elegant:

List<int> myList;

List<int> filteredList = myList.where( x => x > 7)
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

Thanks Tom! ;)

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

Here is a code block / example of some list filtering using three different methods that I put together to show Lambdas and LINQ based list filtering.

    #region List Filtering

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        ListFiltering();
        Console.ReadLine();
    }

    private static void ListFiltering()
    {
        var PersonList = new List<Person>();

        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 23, Name = "Jon", Gender = "M" }); //Non-Constructor Object Property Initialization
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 24, Name = "Jack", Gender = "M" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 29, Name = "Billy", Gender = "M" });

        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 33, Name = "Bob", Gender = "M" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 45, Name = "Frank", Gender = "M" });

        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 24, Name = "Anna", Gender = "F" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 29, Name = "Sue", Gender = "F" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 35, Name = "Sally", Gender = "F" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 36, Name = "Jane", Gender = "F" });
        PersonList.Add(new Person() { Age = 42, Name = "Jill", Gender = "F" });

        //Logic: Show me all males that are less than 30 years old.

        Console.WriteLine("");
        //Iterative Method
        Console.WriteLine("List Filter Normal Way:");
        foreach (var p in PersonList)
            if (p.Gender == "M" && p.Age < 30)
                Console.WriteLine(p.Name + " is " + p.Age);

        Console.WriteLine("");
        //Lambda Filter Method
        Console.WriteLine("List Filter Lambda Way");
        foreach (var p in PersonList.Where(p => (p.Gender == "M" && p.Age < 30))) //.Where is an extension method
            Console.WriteLine(p.Name + " is " + p.Age);

        Console.WriteLine("");
        //LINQ Query Method
        Console.WriteLine("List Filter LINQ Way:");
        foreach (var v in from p in PersonList
                          where p.Gender == "M" && p.Age < 30
                          select new { p.Name, p.Age })
            Console.WriteLine(v.Name + " is " + v.Age);
    }

    private class Person
    {
        public Person() { }
        public int Age { get; set; }
        public string Name { get; set; }
        public string Gender { get; set; }
    }

    #endregion
link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

If you're using C# 3.0 you can use linq

Or, if you prefer, use the special query syntax provided by the C# 3 compiler:

var filteredList = from x in myList
                   where x > 7
                   select x;
link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

You can use the FindAll method of the List, providing a delegate to filter on. Though, I agree with @IainMH that it's not worth worrying yourself too much unless it's a huge list.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

You can use IEnumerable to eliminate the need of a temp list.

public IEnumerable<T> GetFilteredItems(IEnumerable<T> collection)
{
    foreach (T item in collection)
    if (Matches<T>(item))
    {
        yield return item;
    }
}

where Matches is the name of your filter method. And you can use this like:

IEnumerable<MyType> filteredItems = GetFilteredItems(myList);
foreach (MyType item in filteredItems)
{
    // do sth with your filtered items
}

This will call GetFilteredItems function when needed and in some cases that you do not use all items in the filtered collection, it may provide some good performance gain.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

To do it in place, you can use the RemoveAll method of the "List<>" class along with a custom "Predicate" class...but all that does is clean up the code... under the hood it's doing the same thing you are...but yes, it does it in place, so you do same the temp list.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

List has FindAll method that will do the filtering for you and return a subset of the list.

The msdn has a great code example here: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/aa701359(VS.80).aspx

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

That is going to be blazingly fast. Is it causing your system to slow? Is is a huge list? Otherwise, I wouldn't worry.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.