Best way to iterate folders and subfolders

萝らか妹 提交于 2019-11-27 04:21:50
Lloyd

Use Directory.GetFiles(). The bottom of that page includes an example that's fully recursive, I believe.

Chris Dunaway

If you're using .NET 4, you may wish to use the System.IO.DirectoryInfo.EnumerateDirectories and System.IO.DirectoryInfo.EnumerateFiles methods. If you use the Directory.GetFiles method as other posts have recommended, the method call will not return until it has retrieved ALL the entries. This could take a long time if you are using recursion.

From the documentation:

The EnumerateFilesand GetFiles methods differ as follows:

  • When you use EnumerateFiles, you can start enumerating the collection of FileInfo objects before the whole collection is returned.
  • When you use GetFiles, you must wait for the whole array of FileInfo objects to be returned before you can access the array.

Therefore, when you are working with many files and directories, EnumerateFiles can be more efficient.

To iterate through all directories sub folders and files, no matter how much sub folder and files are.

string [] filenames;
 fname = Directory.GetFiles(jak, "*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories).Select(x => Path.GetFileName(x)).ToArray();

then from array you can get what you want via a loop or as you want.

Note that you will need to perform validation checks.

string[] fileNames = Directory.GetFiles("c:\\", "*.*", SearchOption.AllDirectories);
int fileCount = fileNames.Count();
long fileSize = fileNames.Select(file => new FileInfo(file).Length).Sum(); // in bytes

To iterate through files and folders you would normally use the DirectoryInfo and FileInfo types. The FileInfo type has a Length property that returns the file size in bytes.

I think you must write your own code to iterate through the files and calculate the total file size, but it should be a quite simple recursive function.

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