There doesn't seem to be a dictionary.AddRange() method. Does anyone know a better way to copy the items to another dictionary without using a foreach loop.
I'm using the System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary. This is for .NET 2.0.
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There doesn't seem to be a dictionary.AddRange() method. Does anyone know a better way to copy the items to another dictionary without using a foreach loop. I'm using the System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary. This is for .NET 2.0.
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There's nothing wrong with a for/foreach loop. That's all a hypothetical AddRange method would do anyway. The only extra concern I'd have is with memory allocation behaviour, because adding a large number of entries could cause multiple reallocations and re-hashes. There's no way to increase the capacity of an existing Dictionary by a given amount. You might be better off allocating a new Dictionary with sufficient capacity for both current ones, but you'd still need a loop to load at least one of them. |
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There's the Dictionary constructor that takes another Dictionary. You'll have to cast it IDictionary, but there is an Add() overload that takes KeyValuePair. You're still using foreach, though. |
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If you're dealing with two existing objects, you might get some mileage with the CopyTo method: http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/cc645053.aspx Use the Add method of the other collection (receiver) to absorb them. |
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I don't understand, why not using the Dictionary( Dictionary ) (as suggested by ageektrapped ). Do you want to perform a Shallow Copy or a Deep Copy? (that is, both Dictionaries pointing to the same references or new copies of every object inside the new dictionary?) If you want to create a new Dictionary pointing to new objects, I think that the only way is through a foreach. |
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For fun, I created this extension method to dictionary. This should do a deep copy wherever possible.
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