Procedura: contare le occorrenze di una parola in una stringa (LINQ)
Aggiornamento: novembre 2007
In questo esempio viene illustrato come utilizzare una query LINQ per contare le occorrenze di una parola specificata in una stringa. Notare che per eseguire il conteggio, è necessario chiamare prima il metodo Split per creare una matrice di parole. La chiamata al metodo Split comporta una riduzione delle prestazioni. Se l'unica operazione da eseguire sulla stringa è contare le parole, è consigliabile utilizzare i metodi Matches o IndexOf. Tuttavia, se le prestazioni non rappresentano un problema critico o se la frase è già stata suddivisa per eseguire altri tipi di query, può essere opportuno utilizzare LINQ per contare le parole o le frasi.
Esempio
Class CountWords
Shared Sub Main()
Dim text As String = "Historically, the world of data and the world of objects" & _
" have not been well integrated. Programmers work in C# or Visual Basic" & _
" and also in SQL or XQuery. On the one side are concepts such as classes," & _
" objects, fields, inheritance, and .NET Framework APIs. On the other side" & _
" are tables, columns, rows, nodes, and separate languages for dealing with" & _
" them. Data types often require translation between the two worlds; there are" & _
" different standard functions. Because the object world has no notion of query, a" & _
" query can only be represented as a string without compile-time type checking or" & _
" IntelliSense support in the IDE. Transferring data from SQL tables or XML trees to" & _
" objects in memory is often tedious and error-prone."
Dim searchTerm As String = "data"
' Convert the string into an array of words.
Dim dataSource As String() = text.Split(New Char() {" ", ",", ".", ";", ":"}, _
StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)
' Create and execute the query. It executes immediately
' because a singleton value is produced.
' Use ToLower to match "data" and "Data"
Dim matchQuery = From word In dataSource _
Where word.ToLowerInvariant() = searchTerm.ToLowerInvariant() _
Select word
' Count the matches.
Dim count As Integer = matchQuery.Count()
Console.WriteLine(count & " occurrence(s) of the search term """ & _
searchTerm & """ were found.")
' Keep console window open in debug mode.
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.")
Console.ReadKey()
End Sub
End Class
' Output:
' 3 occurrence(s) of the search term "data" were found.
class CountWords
{
static void Main()
{
string text = @"Historically, the world of data and the world of objects" +
@" have not been well integrated. Programmers work in C# or Visual Basic" +
@" and also in SQL or XQuery. On the one side are concepts such as classes," +
@" objects, fields, inheritance, and .NET Framework APIs. On the other side" +
@" are tables, columns, rows, nodes, and separate languages for dealing with" +
@" them. Data types often require translation between the two worlds; there are" +
@" different standard functions. Because the object world has no notion of query, a" +
@" query can only be represented as a string without compile-time type checking or" +
@" IntelliSense support in the IDE. Transferring data from SQL tables or XML trees to" +
@" objects in memory is often tedious and error-prone.";
string searchTerm = "data";
//Convert the string into an array of words
string[] source = text.Split(new char[] { '.', '?', '!', ' ', ';', ':', ',' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);
// Create and execute the query. It executes immediately
// because a singleton value is produced.
// Use ToLowerInvariant to match "data" and "Data"
var matchQuery = from word in source
where word.ToLowerInvariant() == searchTerm.ToLowerInvariant()
select word;
// Count the matches.
int wordCount = matchQuery.Count();
Console.WriteLine("{0} occurrences(s) of the search term \"{1}\" were found.", wordCount, searchTerm);
// Keep console window open in debug mode
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit");
Console.ReadKey();
}
}
/* Output:
3 occurrences(s) of the search term "data" were found.
*/
Compilazione del codice
Creare un progetto di Visual Studio destinato a .NET Framework versione 3.5. Per impostazione predefinita, il progetto contiene un riferimento a System.Core.dll e una direttiva using (C#) o un'istruzione Imports (Visual Basic) per lo spazio dei nomi System.Linq. Nei progetti C# aggiungere una direttiva using per lo spazio dei nomi System.IO.
Copiare questo codice nel progetto.
Premere F5 per compilare ed eseguire il programma.
Premere un tasto per chiudere la finestra della console.