90

I need to search a string in the string array. I dont want to use any for looping in it

string [] arr = {"One","Two","Three"};

string theString = "One"

I need to check whether theString variable is present in arr.

0

16 Answers 16

141

Well, something is going to have to look, and looping is more efficient than recursion (since tail-end recursion isn't fully implemented)... so if you just don't want to loop yourself, then either of:

bool has = arr.Contains(var); // .NET 3.5

or

bool has = Array.IndexOf(arr, var) >= 0;

For info: avoid names like var - this is a keyword in C# 3.0.

86

Every method, mentioned earlier does looping either internally or externally, so it is not really important how to implement it. Here another example of finding all references of target string

       string [] arr = {"One","Two","Three"};
       var target = "One";
       var results = Array.FindAll(arr, s => s.Equals(target));
2
  • 12
    Array.Exists() is better I think. Aug 25, 2017 at 18:30
  • This is appropriate answer to filter for array with searchterm Sep 18, 2019 at 8:58
29

Does it have to be a string[] ? A List<String> would give you what you need.

List<String> testing = new List<String>();
testing.Add("One");
testing.Add("Two");
testing.Add("Three");
testing.Add("Mouse");
bool inList = testing.Contains("Mouse");
17
bool exists = arr.Contains("One");
0
12

I think it is better to use Array.Exists than Array.FindAll.

0
11

Its pretty simple. I always use this code to search string from a string array

string[] stringArray = { "text1", "text2", "text3", "text4" };
string value = "text3";
int pos = Array.IndexOf(stringArray, value);
if (pos > -1)
{
    return true;
}
else
{
    return false;
}
7

If the array is sorted, you can use BinarySearch. This is a O(log n) operation, so it is faster as looping. If you need to apply multiple searches and speed is a concern, you could sort it (or a copy) before using it.

5

Each class implementing IList has a method Contains(Object value). And so does System.Array.

1
  • Note that with the 2.0 generic containers, this is on ICollection<T>; same idea though Nov 5, 2008 at 13:11
4

Why the prohibition "I don't want to use any looping"? That's the most obvious solution. When given the chance to be obvious, take it!

Note that calls like arr.Contains(...) are still going to loop, it just won't be you who has written the loop.

Have you considered an alternate representation that's more amenable to searching?

  • A good Set implementation would perform well. (HashSet, TreeSet or the local equivalent).
  • If you can be sure that arr is sorted, you could use binary search (which would need to recurse or loop, but not as often as a straight linear search).
4

You can use Find method of Array type. From .NET 3.5 and higher.

public static T Find<T>(
    T[] array,
    Predicate<T> match
)

Here is some examples:

// we search an array of strings for a name containing the letter “a”:
static void Main()
{
  string[] names = { "Rodney", "Jack", "Jill" };
  string match = Array.Find (names, ContainsA);
  Console.WriteLine (match);     // Jack
}
static bool ContainsA (string name) { return name.Contains ("a"); }

Here’s the same code shortened with an anonymous method:

string[] names = { "Rodney", "Jack", "Jill" };
string match = Array.Find (names, delegate (string name)
  { return name.Contains ("a"); } ); // Jack

A lambda expression shortens it further:

string[] names = { "Rodney", "Jack", "Jill" };
string match = Array.Find (names, n => n.Contains ("a"));     // Jack
2

At first shot, I could come up with something like this (but it's pseudo code and assuming you cannot use any .NET built-in libaries). Might require a bit of tweaking and re-thinking, but should be good enough for a head-start, maybe?

int findString(String var, String[] stringArray, int currentIndex, int stringMaxIndex)
    {
    if currentIndex > stringMaxIndex 
       return (-stringMaxIndex-1);
    else if var==arr[currentIndex] //or use any string comparison op or function
       return 0;
    else 
       return findString(var, stringArray, currentIndex++, stringMaxIndex) + 1 ;
    }



    //calling code
    int index = findString(var, arr, 0, getMaxIndex(arr));

    if index == -1 printOnScreen("Not found");
    else printOnScreen("Found on index: " + index);
2

In C#, if you can use an ArrayList, you can use the Contains method, which returns a boolean:

if MyArrayList.Contains("One")
1
  • 4
    in .NET 2.0, always prefer List<T> over ArrayList. A List<string> would do the same, but with better type-safety, and more flexibility. Nov 5, 2008 at 13:09
2

You can check the element existence by

arr.Any(x => x == "One")
1

I'm surprised that no one suggested using Array.IndexOf Method.

Indeed, Array.IndexOf has two advantages :

  • It allows searching if an element is included into an array,
  • It gets at the same time the index into the array.
int stringIndex = Array.IndexOf(arr, theString);
if (stringIndex >= 0)
{
    // theString has been found
}

Inline version :

if (Array.IndexOf(arr, theString) >= 0)
{
    // theString has been found
}
0

it is old one ,but this is the way i do it ,

enter code herevar result = Array.Find(names, element => element == "One");

0

Using Contains()

string [] SomeArray = {"One","Two","Three"};
bool IsExist = SomeArray.Contains("One");
Console.WriteLine("Is string exist: "+ IsExist);

Using Find()

string [] SomeArray = {"One","Two","Three"};
var result = Array.Find(SomeArray, element => element == "One");
Console.WriteLine("Required string is: "+ result);

Another simple & traditional way, very useful for beginners to build logic.

string [] SomeArray = {"One","Two","Three"};
foreach (string value in SomeArray) {
    if (value == "One") { 
        Console.WriteLine("Required string is: "+ value);
    }
 }

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