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New methods MinOrDefault and MaxOrDefault #28

Open GoogleCodeExporter opened 8 years ago

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
When you start playing with LINQ queries over sequences of elements (e.g.
getting min / max value for enumerable source) sooner or later you will
come across this one -- the InvalidOperationException (“Sequence contains
no elements”).

The problem occurs as by default queries like IEnumerable<T>.Min(…) and
IEnumerable<T>.Max(…) do not play nicely if you try to execute them on an
empty sequence and just throw the exception described above. Unfortunately
these methods do not have a corresponding counterpart like Single(…) /
SingleOrDefault(…) that is smart enough to query the sequence if it is not
empty or alternatively use the default value without raising an exception.

Basically you got two options now:

    * Either perform the check on the enumerable sequence every time you
are querying it
    * OR integrate the logic in an extension method.

The second approach is much preferable so let’s add the missing link.

http://blogs.telerik.com/manoldonev/posts/08-10-17/linq_sequence_contains_no_ele
ments_extension_methods_to_the_rescue.aspx

Original issue reported on code.google.com by anton.ge...@gmail.com on 17 Sep 2009 at 8:56

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
Compelling feature!

Original comment by Weitzhan...@gmail.com on 23 Nov 2012 at 8:37

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
I need this right now !

Original comment by rdingw...@gmail.com on 5 Dec 2012 at 1:04

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
You can implement this easily with a combination of using nullables and 
Prepend/Concat a null before calling  Min/Max, like this:

var some = Enumerable.Range(10, 10);
var none = Enumerable.Range(10,  0);
Console.WriteLine(some.Cast<int?>().Prepend(null).Min()); // prints 10
Console.WriteLine(none.Cast<int?>().Prepend(null).Min()); // prints null
Console.WriteLine(some.Cast<int?>().Prepend(null).Max()); // prints18
Console.WriteLine(none.Cast<int?>().Prepend(null).Max()); // prints null

Once you have a null you can use ?? fault in a value. The implementation in the 
blog article[1] suffers from iterating the sequence twice.

[1] 
http://blogs.telerik.com/xamlteam/posts/08-10-17/linq-sequence-contains-no-eleme
nts-extension-methods-to-the-rescue.aspx

Original comment by azizatif on 22 Jun 2013 at 12:15

GoogleCodeExporter commented 8 years ago
This issue has been migrated to:
https://github.com/MoreLINQ/morelinq/issues/28
The conversation continues there.
DO NOT post any further comments to the issue tracker on Google Code as it is 
shutting down.
You can also just subscribe to the issue on GitHub to receive notifications of 
any further development.

Original comment by azizatif on 21 Aug 2015 at 6:55