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I just recently noticed Dictionary.TryGetValue(TKey key, out TValue value) and was curious as to which is the better approach to retrieving a value from the Dictionary.

I've traditionally done:

if (myDict.Contains(someKey))
     someVal = myDict[someKey];
     ...

unless I know it has to be in there.

Is it better to just do:

if (myDict.TryGetValue(somekey, out someVal)
    ...

Which is the better practice? Is one faster than the other? I would imagine that the Try version would be slower as its 'swallowing' a try/catch inside itself and using that as logic, no?

Thanks!

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aw man. removed my 'lets-do-this' tag. that one was pretty awesome. – Nicholas Mancuso Dec 18 '08 at 18:31

3 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

TryGetValue is slightly faster, because FindEntry will only be called once.

How much faster? It depends on the dataset at hand. When you call the Contains method, Dictionary does an internal search to find its index. If it returns true, you need another index search to get the actual value. When you use TryGetValue, it searches only once for the index and if found, it assigns the value to your variable.

FYI: It's not actually catching an error.

It's calling:

public bool TryGetValue(TKey key, out TValue value)
{
    int index = this.FindEntry(key);
    if (index >= 0)
    {
        value = this.entries[index].value;
        return true;
    }
    value = default(TValue);
    return false;
}

ContainsKey is this:

public bool ContainsKey(TKey key)
{
    return (this.FindEntry(key) >= 0);
}
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ya. it says so on the MSDN page. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/…. Duh. Thanks. – Nicholas Mancuso Dec 18 '08 at 16:59
TryGetValue is slightly faster, because FindEntry will only be called once. – Joe Dec 18 '08 at 17:09
TryGetValue is much faster when you have a large Dictionary – Diadistis Dec 18 '08 at 17:11
Theoretically (well, also in practice), this should not depend on the size of the dictionary, since expected (!) time of retrieval is constant, i.e. independent of the dictionary size! – Konrad Rudolph Dec 19 '08 at 18:16
vote up 0 vote down

I imagine that trygetvalue is doing something more like:

if(myDict.ReallyOptimisedVersionofContains(someKey))
{ 
  someVal = myDict[someKey];
  return true;
}
return false;

So hopefully no try/catch anywhere.

I think it is just a method of convenience really. I generally use it as it saves a line of code or two.

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vote up 7 vote down

Well in fact TryGetValue is faster. How much faster? It depends on the dataset at hand. When you call the Contains method, Dictionary does an internal search to find its index. If it returns true, you need another index search to get the actual value. When you use TryGetValue, it searches only once for the index and if found, it assigns the value to your variable.

Edit:

Ok, I understand your confusion so let me elaborate:

Case 1:

if (myDict.Contains(someKey))
     someVal = myDict[someKey];

In this case there are 2 calls to FindEntry, one to check if the key exists and one to retrieve it

Case 2:

myDict.TryGetValue(somekey, out someVal)

In this case there is only one call to FindKey because the resulting index is kept for the actual retrieval in the same method.

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Agreed. TryGetValue eliminates the need to do the key lookup twice. It can also help in the case of multi-threading. As between the time you check if the value exists, it may have been added or removed. This can cause "key already exists" or "key not found" exceptions. – Brian Rudolph Dec 18 '08 at 17:55

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