4

I need to write a tree search method which takes a type parameter T and returns all items of type T that exist in the tree. Is there any way to do this? I would prefer elegance over efficiency at this point...

4 Answers 4

2

Something like this:

internal static IEnumerable<T> AllDescendantNodes<T>( this TreeNode input ) 
    where T class;
{
    T current = null;
    foreach ( TreeNode node in input.Nodes )
        if( (current = node as T) != null )
        {
            yield return current;
            foreach ( var subnode in node.AllDescendantNodes<T>() )
                yield return subnode;
        }
}

You would then call this against the root node as an extension method:

foreach( MyCustomNodeClass item in rootNode.AllDescendantNodes<MyCustomNodeClass>() ) 
{
    ...
}
4
  • That works for me. I have no understanding yet of extension methods, so unsure as to whether it is performant. But it is an elegant solution. From what I see only the descendents of a given input are checked. I had to modify AllDescendants to check for the input node type and yield it. Thanks
    – geejay
    Apr 9, 2009 at 11:34
  • Actually, I needed to create a special root node, then pass that in. Modifying AllDescendants was wrong. Thanks
    – geejay
    Apr 9, 2009 at 11:54
  • Extension methods are converted at compile time to normal static calls - there's no performance implication for using them. This method handles the recursion, so I'd potentially have a similar one that worked on the tree's root nodes and then called this.
    – Keith
    Apr 9, 2009 at 12:32
  • A method that uses an explicit stack instead of recursion may have slightly better performance, but I wouldn't worry about it unless you have trees with many millions of nodes. Nov 18, 2011 at 15:19
2

Well, internally the method would have to iterate over all the elements of the tree, so the skip to just enumerating over it, and using the OfType LINQ method isn't that far:

var onlyTs = yourTree.OfType<SomeT>();
1
  • +1 for giving the correct answer :) Just realised I missed the point Apr 9, 2009 at 7:50
1

Assuming your tree is generic. i.e. Item<T>.

int count = yourTree.Count(p => p == typeof(T));

Otherwise, parse each node and compare "item == typeof(T)"

1

What you need is a basic tree traversal function (preorder, inorder or postorder -- this doesn't matter) and a filter function. Then you can compose those two together and get what you need:

IEnumerable<T> Traverse(Tree<T> tree)
{
    yield return tree.Data;

    foreach(Tree<T> subtree in tree.Subtrees)
        foreach(T t in Traverse(subtree))
            yield return t;
}

IEnumerable<U> Filter<T, U>(IEnumerable<T> source)        
    where U : T
{
    foreach(T t in source)
        if(t is U)
            yield return (U)t;
}
1
  • Similar idea to mine, but I'd make one change: you're doing the conversion twice - t as U and checking for null is quicker for classes than if( t is U ) (U) t;
    – Keith
    Apr 9, 2009 at 8:40

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