I have a method that returns an IEnumerable<T>
. I call this method form two places, and in one of those places I do not do anything with the results.
It looks like the C# compiler removes the call to that method even if I decorate it with [MethodImpl(MethodImplOptions.NoOptimization)]
. The code doesn't even enter the calling method. If I add .ToList()
at the end, though, it is executed.
Is there a way to disable this optimization by the compiler/runtime? Looking at the ILDASM output, it looks like it's more of a runtime optimization because the call is there.
yield
the resulting enumerable is evaluated lazily.IEnumerable<T>
using theyield
keyword. Adding.ToList()
forces theIEnumerable<T>
to be buffered and the method to be executed. This is very much a feature, not a bug!