I have linq with Select
where IDisposable
objects are created. Afterward there is a filter Where
and that leads to some object never disposed.
Here is a repro:
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var results = "1234567890"
.Select(o => new Test(o))
.Where(o => o.Value > '3' && o.Value < '7')
.ToList();
// do something with results
// ...
// dispose
foreach (var result in results)
result.Dispose();
}
}
class Test : IDisposable
{
public char Value { get; }
public Test(char value)
{
Value = value;
Console.WriteLine($"{Value}");
}
public void Dispose() => Console.WriteLine($"{Value} disposed");
}
Output:
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0
4 disposed
5 disposed
6 disposed
The problem:
As you can see there are 1
, 2
, 3
, 7
, 8
, 9
, 0
which are created and never disposed.
My solution:
I can move Where
condition inside Select
, but then I need to apply ugly "return null
+ Where
not null
" workaround:
var results = "1234567890".Select(o =>
{
if (o > '3' && o < '7')
return new Test(o);
return null;
}).Where(o => o != null).ToList();
Output:
4
5
6
4 disposed
5 disposed
6 disposed
Is there a better (more elegant) way?
My workaround apart from being ugly has a problem if Select
is inside some library method returning IEnumerable<T>
which I can not change. How to apply Where
without leakages?
Dispose()
inWhere
as a temp workaround (thanks to Dennis) , while waiting/looking for a better solution.IDisposable
property which is necessary to check if an instance is relevant. Instead it should have a non-disposable property. This property should either be initialized from outside(constructor/property) or by calling a method that uses a disposable(for example a connection). It's too abstract here but i guess you can separate it from the model. If the constructor or method uses the disposable they are responsible to dispose it there.