How exactly is the right way to call IEnumerator.Reset
?
The documentation says:
The Reset
method is provided for COM interoperability. It does not necessarily need to be implemented; instead, the implementer can simply throw a NotSupportedException
.
Okay, so does that mean I'm not supposed to ever call it?
It's so tempting to use exceptions for flow control:
using (enumerator = GetSomeExpensiveEnumerator())
{
while (enumerator.MoveNext()) { ... }
try { enumerator.Reset(); } //Try an inexpensive method
catch (NotSupportedException)
{ enumerator = GetSomeExpensiveEnumerator(); } //Fine, get another one
while (enumerator.MoveNext()) { ... }
}
Is that how we're supposed to use it? Or are we not meant to use it from managed code at all?
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