Thanks Michal Komorowski. However when trying his solution myself I saw a remarkable distinction between Directory.EnumerateFiles and Directory.GetFiles():
Directory.CreateDirectory(@"c:MyTest");
// Create fies: b c e
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTest.txt").Dispose();
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTestc.txt").Dispose();
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTeste.txt").Dispose();
string[] files = Directory.GetFiles(@"c:MyTest");
var fileEnumerator = Directory.EnumerateFiles(@"c:MyTest");
// delete file c; create file a d f
File.Delete(@"c:MyTestc.txt");
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTesta.txt").Dispose();
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTestd.txt").Dispose();
File.CreateText(@"c:MyTestf.txt").Dispose();
Console.WriteLine("Result from Directory.GetFiles");
foreach (var file in files) Console.WriteLine(file);
Console.WriteLine("Result from Directory.EnumerateFiles");
foreach (var file in fileEnumerator) Console.WriteLine(file);
This will give different output.
Result from Directory.GetFiles
c:MyTest.txt
c:MyTestc.txt
c:MyTeste.txt
Result from Directory.EnumerateFiles
c:MyTest.txt
c:MyTestd.txt
c:MyTeste.txt
c:MyTestf.txt
Results:
- GetFiles still saw the old files: B C E as expected
- EnumerateFiles saw the new files D and F. It correctly skipped the deleted file C, but it missed the new file A.
So the difference in usage between EnumerateFiles and GetFiles is more than just performance.
- GetFiles returns the files that were in the folder the moment you called the function. Which could be expected, because it's just an enumeration over a string collection
- EnumerateFiles correctly skips deleted files, but doesn't see all added files. If the folder changes while enumerating the result is fairly undefined.
So if you expect that your folder changes while enumerating carefully choose the desired function
- Expect GetFiles to see deleted files
- Expect EnumerateFiles to miss some of the new files.
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