Elegant way to combine multiple collections of elements?

To me Concat as an extension method is not very elegant in my code when I have multiple large sequences to concat. This is merely a codde indentation/formatting problem and something very personal.

Sure it looks good like this:

var list = list1.Concat(list2).Concat(list3);

Not so readable when it reads like:

var list = list1.Select(x = > x)
   .Concat(list2.Where(x => true)
   .Concat(list3.OrderBy(x => x));

Or when it looks like:

return Normalize(list1, a, b)
    .Concat(Normalize(list2, b, c))
       .Concat(Normalize(list3, c, d));

or whatever your preferred formatting is. Things get worse with more complex concats. The reason for my sort of cognitive dissonance with the above style is that the first sequence lie outside of the Concat method whereas the subsequent sequences lie inside. I rather prefer to call the static Concat method directly and not the extension style:

var list = Enumerable.Concat(list1.Select(x => x),
                             list2.Where(x => true));

For more number of concats of sequences I carry the same static method as in OP:

public static IEnumerable<T> Concat<T>(params IEnumerable<T>[] sequences)
{
    return sequences.SelectMany(x => x);
}

So I can write:

return EnumerableEx.Concat
(
    list1.Select(x = > x),
    list2.Where(x => true),
    list3.OrderBy(x => x)
);

Looks better. The extra, otherwise redundant, class name I have to write is not a problem for me considering my sequences look cleaner with the Concat call. It's less of a problem in C# 6. You can just write:

return Concat(list1.Select(x = > x),
              list2.Where(x => true),
              list3.OrderBy(x => x));

Wished we had list concatenation operators in C#, something like:

list1 @ list2 // F#
list1 ++ list2 // Scala

Much cleaner that way.


I think you might be looking for LINQ's .Concat()?

var combined = foo.Concat(bar).Concat(foobar).Concat(...);

Alternatively, .Union() will remove duplicate elements.