How to: Perform Streaming Transformations of Text to XML
One approach to processing a text file is to write an extension method that streams the text file a line at a time using the yield return construct. You then can write a LINQ query that processes the text file in a lazy deferred fashion. If you then use XStreamingElement to stream output, you then can create a transformation from the text file to XML that uses a minimal amount of memory, regardless of the size of the source text file.
There are some caveats regarding streaming transformations. A streaming transformation is best applied in situations where you can process the entire file once, and if you can process the lines in the order that they occur in the source document. If you have to process the file more than once, or if you have to sort the lines before you can process them, you will lose many of the benefits of using a streaming technique.
Example
The following text file, People.txt, is the source for this example.
#This is a comment
1,Tai,Yee,Writer
2,Nikolay,Grachev,Programmer
3,David,Wright,Inventor
The following code contains an extension method that streams the lines of the text file in a deferred fashion.
Note
The following example uses the yield return construct of C#. Equivalent code is provided in Visual Basic using a class that implements the IEnumerable(Of XElement) interface. For an example of implement IEnumerable(Of T) in Visual Basic, see Walkthrough: Implementing IEnumerable(Of T) in Visual Basic.
public static class StreamReaderSequence
{
public static IEnumerable<string> Lines(this StreamReader source)
{
String line;
if (source == null)
throw new ArgumentNullException("source");
while ((line = source.ReadLine()) != null)
{
yield return line;
}
}
}
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
StreamReader sr = new StreamReader("People.txt");
XStreamingElement xmlTree = new XStreamingElement("Root",
from line in sr.Lines()
let items = line.Split(',')
where !line.StartsWith("#")
select new XElement("Person",
new XAttribute("ID", items[0]),
new XElement("First", items[1]),
new XElement("Last", items[2]),
new XElement("Occupation", items[3])
)
);
Console.WriteLine(xmlTree);
sr.Close();
}
}
Module Module1
Sub Main()
Dim sr = New IO.StreamReader("..\..\People.txt")
Dim xmlTree = New XStreamingElement("Root",
From line In sr.Lines()
Let items = Split(line, ",")
Where Not line.StartsWith("#")
Select <Person ID=<%= items(0) %>>
<First><%= items(1) %></First>
<Last><%= items(2) %></Last>
<Occupation><%= items(3) %></Occupation>
</Person>
)
Console.WriteLine(xmlTree)
sr.Close()
End Sub
End Module
Module StreamReaderSequence
<System.Runtime.CompilerServices.Extension()>
Public Function Lines(ByRef source As IO.StreamReader) As IEnumerable(Of String)
If source Is Nothing Then Throw New ArgumentNullException("source")
Return New StreamReaderEnumerable(source)
End Function
End Module
Public Class StreamReaderEnumerable
Implements IEnumerable(Of String)
Private _source As IO.StreamReader
Public Sub New(ByVal source As IO.StreamReader)
_source = source
End Sub
Public Function GetEnumerator() As Generic.IEnumerator(Of String) Implements IEnumerable(Of String).GetEnumerator
Return New StreamReaderEnumerator(_source)
End Function
Public Function GetEnumerator1() As IEnumerator Implements IEnumerable.GetEnumerator
Return Me.GetEnumerator()
End Function
End Class
Public Class StreamReaderEnumerator
Implements IEnumerator(Of String)
Private _current As String
Private _source As IO.StreamReader
Public Sub New(ByVal source As IO.StreamReader)
_source = source
End Sub
Public ReadOnly Property Current As String Implements Generic.IEnumerator(Of String).Current
Get
Return _current
End Get
End Property
Public ReadOnly Property Current1 As Object Implements IEnumerator.Current
Get
Return Me.Current
End Get
End Property
Public Function MoveNext() As Boolean Implements IEnumerator.MoveNext
_current = _source.ReadLine()
Return If(_current IsNot Nothing, True, False)
End Function
Public Sub Reset() Implements IEnumerator.Reset
_current = Nothing
_source.DiscardBufferedData()
_source.BaseStream.Seek(0, IO.SeekOrigin.Begin)
End Sub
Public Sub Dispose() Implements IDisposable.Dispose
End Sub
End Class
This example produces the following output:
<Root>
<Person ID="1">
<First>Tai</First>
<Last>Yee</Last>
<Occupation>Writer</Occupation>
</Person>
<Person ID="2">
<First>Nikolay</First>
<Last>Grachev</Last>
<Occupation>Programmer</Occupation>
</Person>
<Person ID="3">
<First>David</First>
<Last>Wright</Last>
<Occupation>Inventor</Occupation>
</Person>
</Root>
See Also
Reference
Concepts
Advanced Query Techniques (LINQ to XML)
Build Date:
2012-08-02