A coworker asked me today how to add a range to a collection. He has a class that inherits from Collection<T>
. There's a get-only property of that type that already contains some items. He wants to add the items in another collection to the property collection. How can he do so in a C#3-friendly fashion? (Note the constraint about the get-only property, which prevents solutions like doing Union and reassigning.)
Sure, a foreach with Property. Add will work. But a List<T>
-style AddRange would be far more elegant.
It's easy enough to write an extension method:
public static class CollectionHelpers
{
public static void AddRange<T>(this ICollection<T> destination,
IEnumerable<T> source)
{
foreach (T item in source)
{
destination.Add(item);
}
}
}
But I have the feeling I'm reinventing the wheel. I didn't find anything similar in System.Linq
or morelinq.
Bad design? Just Call Add? Missing the obvious?
No, this seems perfectly reasonable. There is a List<T>.AddRange()
method that basically does just this, but requires your collection to be a concrete List<T>
.