55

I was wondering if it is possible to cast an IEnumerable to a List. Is there any way to do it other than copying out each item into a list?

0

6 Answers 6

66

As already suggested, use yourEnumerable.ToList(). It enumerates through your IEnumerable, storing the contents in a new List. You aren't necessarily copying an existing list, as your IEnumerable may be generating the elements lazily.

This is exactly what the other answers are suggesting, but clearer. Here's the disassembly so you can be sure:

public static List<TSource> ToList<TSource>(this IEnumerable<TSource> source)
{
    if (source == null)
    {
        throw Error.ArgumentNull("source");
    }
    return new List<TSource>(source);
}
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  • 1
    will it throw an error if IEnumerable is not null but empty ? Feb 15, 2018 at 6:03
  • 1
    @SumitJoshi no it won't throw an error. An IEnumerable can be empty.
    – user18908005
    Jul 4, 2022 at 0:58
52
using System.Linq;

Use the .ToList() method. Found in the System.Linq namespace.

var yourList = yourEnumerable.ToList();

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/dotnet/api/system.linq?view=netcore-2.2

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  • 5
    If not available using System.Linq is missing :). This should totally be the accepted answer... Feb 2, 2017 at 16:55
  • 1
    Also if it's not available, you may have forgotten to declare your IEnumerable with its <T>.
    – Keavon
    Feb 11, 2019 at 22:52
  • Very simple and to the point, thanks! Maybe use a null-conditional operator in yourEnumerable?.ToList(); to take into account the possibility that yourEnumerable might be null? Nov 17, 2020 at 9:14
7

As others suggested, simply use the ToList() method on an enumerable object:

var myList = myEnumerable.ToList()

But, if your object implementing the IEnumerable interface doesn't have the ToList() method and you're getting an error like the following:

'IEnumerable' does not contain a definition for 'ToList'

...you're probably missing the System.Linq namespace, because the ToList() method is an extension method provided by that namespace, it's not a member of the IEnumerable interface itself.

So just add the namespace to your source file:

using System.Linq
3

Create a new List and pass the old IEnumerable to its initializer:

    IEnumerable<int> enumerable = GetIEnumerable<T>();
    List<int> list = new List<int>(enumerable);
1
2

Another gotcha (async call)

An async call may be your problem. If you added the using System.Linq statement and you are still getting the error "does not contain a definition for 'ToList' and no accessible extension method...", look carefully for the Task keyword in your error message.

Original Call (works)

IEnumerable<MyDocument> docList = await _documentRepository.GetListAsync();

Attempt to use ToList (still not working)

So...if you are doing this and it does NOT work

List<MyDocument> docList = await _documentRepository.GetListAsync().ToList();

Use parenthesis

You are actually calling ToList on the Task<IEnumerable>! Add parenthesis around your await call like this

List<MyDocument> docList = (await _documentRepository.GetListAsync()).ToList();
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no, you should copy, if you are sure that the reference is reference to list, you can convert like this

List<int> intsList = enumIntList as List<int>;
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  • 5
    If you're sure that it's a reference to a list, you should use a direct cast so that it will throw an exception if you're wrong. Use "as" if you think it might be a List<T> but you're not sure, and neither are error conditions. Then test whether the result is null.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 7, 2009 at 7:31
  • Maybe add an 'if (intsList == null) intsList = new List<int>(enumIntList);' if it might be a 'List<int>', already, but there are some cases where it is not.
    – jerryjvl
    Jun 7, 2009 at 8:22

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