6

In C#, I'm trying to build an extension method for StringBuilder called AppendCollection() that would let me do this:

var sb1 = new StringBuilder();
var sb2 = new StringBuilder();
var people = new List<Person>() { ...init people here... };
var orders = new List<Orders>() { ...init orders here... };

sb1.AppendCollection(people, p => p.ToString());
sb2.AppendCollection(orders, o => o.ToString());

string stringPeople = sb1.ToString();
string stringOrders = sb2.ToString();

stringPeople would end up with a line for each person in the list. Each line would be the result of p.ToString(). Likewise for stringOrders. I'm not quite sure how to write the code to make the lambdas work with generics.

2
  • Any reason you don't want to use String.Join() for this? Dec 9, 2008 at 19:53
  • 1
    I'd like to be able to pass in a lambda as a formatter so you could do things like sb1.AppendCollection(people, => p.FirstName + " " + p.LastName); Dec 9, 2008 at 20:16

7 Answers 7

13

Use the Func<T,string> delegate.

public static void AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, 
                                       IEnumerable<T> collection, Func<T, string> method) {
   foreach(T x in collection) 
       sb.AppendLine(method(x));
}
3
  • I don't like this as it breaks the paradigm of StringBuilder. Methods on StringBuilder should just continue to add onto the internal buffer until ToString is called on the builder. This combines the append/tostring steps and is not like the other append methods on StringBuilder.
    – tvanfosson
    Dec 9, 2008 at 19:21
  • Sure, I updated the answer to mention my opinion on this, but it's specifically asked in the question. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:23
  • I agree completely. I typed up that example code a little too fast. I've updated the question. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:37
5
 public static void AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder builder, IEnumerable<T> list, Func<T,string> func)
        {
            foreach (var item in list)
            {
                builder.AppendLine(func(item));
            }
        }

I wouldn't return a string, I would just append it to the original Stringbuilder that was passed in.

0
3

I'm not sure you need to work that hard:

 public static void AppendCollection( this StringBuilder builder,
                                      ICollection collection )
 {
     foreach (var item in collection)
     {
        builder.AppendLine( Convert.ToString( item ) );
     }
 }

Used as

 List<Person> people = ...

 StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
 builder.AppendCollection( people );
 var s = builder.ToString();

Of course, Person needs to override ToString() to produce the correct output for a Person object.

4
  • By using the lambda, you get to format the item in the collection how ever you want. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:38
  • Sure, but you're just calling ToString()
    – tvanfosson
    Dec 9, 2008 at 23:53
  • I probably should have wrote something like sb1.AppendCollection(p.FirstName + " " + p.LastName) in the example. That's the flexibility I like in this function. Dec 11, 2008 at 7:19
  • Lance, in that case I would rather provide an overload for AppendCollection that lets you specify a formatting, and then write a custom formatter for your type. That way, you use established interfaces and facilitate code reuse, instead of creating a whole new interface-breaking API. Feb 18, 2009 at 16:40
3

Something like:

  public static void AppendCollection<TItem>(this StringBuilder builder, IEnumerable<TItem> items, Func<TItem, string> valueSelector)
  {
       foreach(TItem item in items)
       {  
            builder.Append(valueSelector(item));
       }
  }

I would add in a useful default to save specifiying the lambda in 90% of cases...

   public static void AppendCollection<TItem>(this StringBuilder builder, IEnumerable<TItem> items)
  {
      AppendCollection(builder, items, x=>x.ToString());
   }
3

My version:

    public static string AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, IEnumerable<T> enumerable, Func<T, string> method)
    {
        List<T> l = new List<T>(enumerable);
        l.ForEach(item => sb.AppendLine(method(item)));
        return sb.ToString();
    }

but you shouldn't return a string in this case. I would prefer the following:

    public static void AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, IEnumerable<T> enumerable, Func<T, string> method)
    {
        List<T> l = new List<T>(enumerable);
        l.ForEach(item => sb.AppendLine(method(item)));
    }

to be used like:

        sb.AppendCollection(people, p => p.ToString());
        sb.AppendCollection(orders, o => o.ToString());
        Console.WriteLine(sb.ToString());
1
  • I agree that I shouldn't return a string. I've updated the question. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:40
2
static class SBExtention
{
  static string AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, 
                                    IEnumerable<T> coll, 
                                    Func<T,string> action)
  {
       foreach(T t in coll)
       {
          sb.Append(action(t));
          sb.Append("\n");
       }
       return sb.ToString();

  }
}

However, I think you'll be better off having it return the StringBuilder. That way you could chain it:

  static StringBuilder AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, 
                                    IEnumerable<T> coll, 
                                    Func<T,string> action)
  {
       // same
       return sb;

  }

string peopleAndOrders = sb.AppendCollection(people, p => p.ToString()) .AppendCollection(orders, o => o.ToString()).ToString();

And I agree with Jennifer about the default case:

   public static StringBuilder AppendCollection<TItem>(
                  this StringBuilder builder, 
                  IEnumerable<TItem> items)
  {
      return AppendCollection(builder, items, x=>x.ToString());
   }

string peopleAndOrders = sb.AppendCollection(people).AppendCollection(orders).ToString();

1
  • The chaining thing is nice, but I generally prefer my extension methods to basically work the same way as the other methods on the class. Changing the basic pattern of how it works makes it harder to understand.
    – tvanfosson
    Dec 9, 2008 at 19:25
2

What is this method suppose to return? I can see a string, but why, if you are appending to a StringBuilder?

What you are trying to do is rather easy, but you need to explain exactly what you want.

Update:

Here's my take. Using an extension method for this is stupid and pointless if you are just going to pass in a new StringBuilder and return a string.

Update 2:

Now that I see that usage, what you are doing is bad practice. What you should ideally be doing is something like:

public static string Print<T>(this IEnumerable<T> col, Func<T,string> printer)
{
  var sb = new StringBuilder();
  foreach (T t in col)
  {
    sb.AppendLine(printer(t));
  }
  return sb.ToString();
}

string[] col = { "Foo" , "Bar" };
string lines = col.Print( s => s);

Update 3:

After more clarification:

public static void AppendCollection<T>(this StringBuilder sb, 
   List<T> col, Func<T,string> printer)
{
  col.ForEach( o => sb.AppendLine(printer(o)));
}

(which is the same as bruno conde said)

And now you dont really need it anymore :)

8
  • So I am getting voted down, because I am asking for clarification? That's the spirit...
    – leppie
    Dec 9, 2008 at 19:11
  • I think the point is that your post isn't an answer, its a question. I did not vote you down. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:14
  • You can avoid the down votes by asking for clarification in a comment rather than a answer. I also did not down vote. That's what I do to avoid people who think that anything that's not an answer is not helpful.
    – tvanfosson
    Dec 9, 2008 at 19:17
  • But I did not want that. I was going to post an answer once I have clarification...
    – leppie
    Dec 9, 2008 at 19:18
  • The method should return void rather than a string like I had at first. It should operate like AppendLine(), but allow you to pass a collection and formatter function. Dec 9, 2008 at 19:42

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