I have a folder with far too many files in, and I want to go through each file one by one. The problem is that Directory.GetFiles returns a completed array, and this takes too long.
I would rather have an object I would point to a folder, then call a function that returns me the next file in the folder. Does .NET have a class like this please?
(I'd prefer to avoid win32 interops, as I plan to use this on Mono as well.开发者_如何学Go)
Many thanks.
You can't do this in .NET 3.5, but you can in .NET 4.0, as per this blog post:
DirectoryInfo directory = new DirectoryInfo(@"\\share\symbols");
IEnumerable<FileInfo> files = directory.EnumerateFiles();
foreach (var file in files) {
Console.WriteLine("Name={0}, Length={1}", file.Name, file.Length);
}
(Likewise there's a static Directory.EnumerateFiles
method.)
I don't know whether that API has been ported to Mono yet.
Take a look at FastDirectoryEnumerator project on CodeProject web site.
It does exactly what you need and even more, I was able to successfully use it on a slow network share with lots of files and performance was just great.
Drawback - it uses interop so it may not be portable to Mono.
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