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I am dealing with a rather large amount of files in a given directory. I need to get a list of all files but I find for loops to be too slow.

Is there any way I can list files in a directory without using a for loop?

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  • You have to loop, and for is how you do it in Go. It is unlikely to be specifically for and instead what you're using to get list the files and what you're doing inside the for loop. Could you show your slow code?
    – Schwern
    Jan 28, 2021 at 23:41
  • What I'm wondering if there is a way to list all files in a given directory without looping at all, any other way? If we are speaking about hundreds of thousands to millions of files is there a faster way than looping?
    – Barry
    Jan 28, 2021 at 23:44
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    It's not "looping" that is slow, your benchmark is wrong.
    – zerkms
    Jan 28, 2021 at 23:45
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    @Barry There are three main ways to get the list of files in a directory and none of them require loops. And millions of files in a single directory becomes a filesystem problem, not a Go problem. Please show us your code and more detail about your situation, otherwise we can't help.
    – Schwern
    Jan 28, 2021 at 23:46
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    @Barry You could sanitize the code to show just reading files in a directory; I cannot fathom how you've been doing it without using standard libraries. Again, it's not Go's loop that's slow, it's how you're using it. Go's standard libraries will loop. You can look at the underlying code yourself: readdirnames and readdir. And, again, millions of files in a single directory will strain most filesystems. Consider a different approach.
    – Schwern
    Jan 29, 2021 at 0:43

1 Answer 1

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files, err := filepath.Glob(path + "*.xyz")

works nicely for me.

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