Here is a solution which separates the partitioning logic into a separate function.
// A separate static function
private static IEnumerable<IEnumerable<T>> BreakIntoBlocks<T>(T[] source, int blockSize)
{
for (int i = 0; i < source.Length; i += blockSize)
{
yield return source.Skip(i).Take(blockSize);
}
}
// And in your code
string[] lines = new string[1000000];
foreach(IEnumerable<string> stringBlock in BreakIntoBlocks(lines, 100))
{
// stringblock is a block of 100 elements
// Here is where you put the code that processes each separate group
}
The attempt above should be faster than my first attempt (below)
int blockSize = 100;
int i = 0;
IEnumerable<IEnumerable<string>> query = from s in lines
let num = i++
group s by num / blockSize into g
select g;
foreach(IEnumerable<string> stringBlock in query)
{
// Stringblock will be a block of 100 elements.
// Process this 100 elements here.
}
The problem which using the grouping clause is that LINQ will allocate every one of those 1000000 element to groups before it returns the first element.