vote up 1 vote down star
1

Consider this:

Requisite:

//The alphabet from a-z
List<char> letterRange = Enumerable.Range('a', 'z' - 'a' + 1)
.Select(i => (Char)i).ToList(); //97 - 122 + 1 = 26 letters/iterations

Standard foreach:

foreach (var range in letterRange)
{
    Console.Write(range + ",");
}
Console.Write("\n");

Inbuilt foreach:

letterRange.ForEach(range => Console.Write(range + ",")); //delegate(char range) works as well
Console.Write("\n");

I have tried timing them against each other and the inbuilt foreach is up to 2 times faster, which seems like a lot.

I have googled around, but I can not seem to find any answers.

Also, regarding: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/365615/in-c-net-which-loop-runs-faster-for-or-foreach

for (int i = 0; i < letterRange.Count; i++)
{
    Console.Write(letterRange[i] + ",");
}
Console.Write("\n");

Doesn't act execute faster than standard foreach as far as I can tell.

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3 Answers

vote up 10 vote down check

I think your benchmark is flawed. Console.Write is an I/O bound task and it's the most time consuming part of your benchmark. This is a micro-benchmark and should be done very carefully for accurate results.

Here is a benchmark: http://diditwith.net/PermaLink,guid,506c0888-8c5f-40e5-9d39-a09e2ebf3a55.aspx (It looks good but I haven't validated it myself).

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I believe you are right. Are you able to provide some proper benchmark results? – CasperT Apr 13 at 14:43
Instead, create a stringbuilder with enough initial capacity to hold the entire result and append each string to that. Then output everything all once, and after you've stopped your timer. – Joel Coehoorn Apr 13 at 14:46
ah, I didn't notice that article features Lists<T>.ForEach benchmarks as well. Thanks then – CasperT Apr 13 at 14:49
vote up 0 vote down

This is because the foreach method is not using an enumerator. Enumerators (foreach) tend to be slower then a basic for loop:

Here's the code for the ForEach method:

public void ForEach(Action<T> action)
{
    if (action == null)
    {
        ThrowHelper.ThrowArgumentNullException(ExceptionArgument.match);
    }
    for (int i = 0; i < this._size; i++)
    {
        action(this._items[i]);
    }
}

While I would expect there to be a difference, I'm a little surprised it's as large as you indicated. Using the enumerator approach you are taking an extra object creation, and then extra steps are taken to ensure the enumerator is not invalidated (the collection is modified). Your also going through an extra function call Current() to get the member. All this adds time.

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vote up 3 vote down

When you enter a foreach loop, you enumerate over each item. That enumeration causes two method calls per iteration: one to IEnumerator<T>.MoveNext(), and another to IEnumerator<T>.Current. That's two call IL instructions.

List<T>.ForEach is faster because it has only one method call per iteration -- whatever your supplied Action<T> delegate is. That's one callvirt IL instruction. This is significantly faster than two call instructions.

As others pointed out, IO-bound instructions like Console.WriteLine() will pollute your benchmark. Do something that can be confined entirely to memory, like adding elements of a sequence together.

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