vote up 12 vote down star
1

What's the "best" (taking both speed and readability into account) way to determine if a list is empty? Even if the list is of type IEnumerable<T> and doesn't have a Count property.

Right now I'm tossing up between this:

if (myList.Count() == 0) { ... }

and this:

if (!myList.Any()) { ... }

My guess is that the second option is faster, since it'll come back with a result as soon as it sees the first item, whereas the second option (for an IEnumerable) will need to visit every item to return the count.

That being said, does the second option look as readable to you? Which would you prefer? Or can you think of a better way to test for an empty list?

Edit @lassevk's response seems to be the most logical, coupled with a bit of runtime checking to use a cached count if possible, like this:

public static bool IsEmpty<T>(this IEnumerable<T> list)
{
    if (list is ICollection<T>) return ((ICollection<T>)list).Count == 0;

    return !list.Any();
}
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9 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

You could do this:

public static Boolean IsEmpty<T>(this IEnumerable<T> source)
{
    if (source == null)
        return true; // or throw an exception
    return !source.Any();
}

Edit: Note that simply using the .Count method will be fast if the underlying source actually has a fast Count property. A valid optimization above would be to detect a few base types and simply use the .Count property of those, instead of the .Any() approach, but then fall back to .Any() if no guarantee can be made.

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vote up 5 vote down

I just wrote up a quick test, try this:

 IEnumerable<Object> myList = new List<Object>();

 Stopwatch watch = new Stopwatch();

 int x;

 watch.Start();
 for (var i = 0; i <= 1000000; i++)
 {
    if (myList.Count() == 0) x = i; 
 }
 watch.Stop();

 Stopwatch watch2 = new Stopwatch();

 watch2.Start();
 for (var i = 0; i <= 1000000; i++)
 {
     if (!myList.Any()) x = i;
 }
 watch2.Stop();

 Console.WriteLine("myList.Count() = " + watch.ElapsedMilliseconds.ToString());
 Console.WriteLine("myList.Any() = " + watch2.ElapsedMilliseconds.ToString());
 Console.ReadLine();

The second is almost three times slower :)

Trying the stopwatch test again with a Stack or array or other scenarios it really depends on the type of list it seems - because they prove Count to be slower.

So I guess it depends on the type of list you're using!

(Just to point out, I put 2000+ objects in the List and count was still faster, opposite with other types)

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Enumerable.Count<T>() has special handling for ICollection<T>. If you try this with something other than a basic list, I expect you'll see significantly different (slower) results. Any() will remain about the same, though. – Marc Gravell Oct 26 at 5:08
vote up 4 vote down

LINQ itself must be doing some serious optimization around the Count() method somehow.

Does this surprise you? I imagine that for IList implementations, Count simply reads the number of elements directly while Any has to query the IEnumerable.GetEnumerator method, create an instance and call MoveNext at least once.

/EDIT @Matt:

I can only assume that the Count() extension method for IEnumerable is doing something like this:

Yes, of course it does. This is what I meant. Actually, it uses ICollection instead of IList but the result is the same.

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vote up 2 vote down

@Konrad what surprises me is that in my tests, I'm passing the list into a method that accepts IEnumerable<T>, so the runtime can't optimize it by calling the Count() extension method for IList<T>.

I can only assume that the Count() extension method for IEnumerable is doing something like this:

public static int Count<T>(this IEnumerable<T> list)
{
    if (list is IList<T>) return ((IList<T>)list).Count;

    int i = 0;
    foreach (var t in list) i++;
    return i;
}

... in other words, a bit of runtime optimization for the special case of IList<T>.

/EDIT @Konrad +1 mate - you're right about it more likely being on ICollection<T>.

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vote up 1 vote down

@Crucible's profiling code yields some interesting results for different implementations of the list.

I like @lassevk's flexible extension-method approach. Certainly myList.IsEmpty() is the most readable syntax.

I'll leave this question open for a while to garner more opinions. I think it's an interesting question.

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vote up 1 vote down

@Keith The differences between Any() and Count() seem clear, but @crucible's profiling code seems to indicate that Count() is faster for certain implementations of IEnumerable. For List I can't get Any() to give a faster result than Count() until the list size is up in the thousands of items.

LINQ itself must be doing some serious optimization around the Count() method somehow.

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vote up 1 vote down

Ok, so what about this one?

public static bool IsEmpty<T>(this IEnumerable<T> enumerable)
{
    return !enumerable.GetEnumerator().MoveNext();
}

EDIT: I've just realized that someone has sketched this solution already. It was mentioned that the Any() method will do this, but why not do it yourself? Regards

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Yeah that's quite succinct. – Matt Hamilton Oct 26 at 4:58
vote up 0 vote down

The second option is much quicker if you have multiple items.

  • Any() returns as soon as 1 item is found.
  • Count() has to keep going through the entire list.

For instance suppose the enumeration had 1000 items.

  • Any() would check the first one, then return true.
  • Count() would return 1000 after traversing the entire enumeration.

This is potentially worse if you use one of the predicate overrides - Count() still has to check every single item, even it there is only one match.

You get used to using the Any one - it does make sense and is readable.

One caveat - if you have a List, rather than just an IEnumerable then use that list's Count property.

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vote up 0 vote down

This extension method works for me:

public static bool IsEmpty<T>(this IEnumerable<T> enumerable)
{
    try
    {
        enumerable.First();
        return false;
    }
    catch (InvalidOperationException)
    {
        return true;
    }
}
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Avoid such use of exceptions. In the above code, you expect an exception for certain, well-defined inputs (i.e. empty enumerations). Hence, they are no exceptions, they are the rule. That’s an abuse of this control mechanism which has implications on readability and performance. Reserve the use of exceptions for truly exceptional cases. – Konrad Rudolph Oct 25 at 12:14
Generally, I would agree. But this is a workaround for a corresponding missing IsEmpty method. And I would argue that a workaround never is the ideal way to do something... Furthermore, especially in this case, the intent is very clear and the "dirty" code is encapsulated and hidden away in a well-defined place. – Jonny Dee Oct 25 at 13:23

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