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Home/ Questions/Q 924627
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T19:23:09+00:00 2026-05-15T19:23:09+00:00

Currently if we get direction of ordering as an external dependency we have to

  • 0

Currently if we get direction of ordering as an external dependency we have to use if to apply this direction:

public static IEnumerable<FileInfo> getlist(string directory, string searchPattern, string order)
{
    var files = new DirectoryInfo(directory).EnumerateFiles(searchPattern);

    if (order == "A")
        return files.OrderBy(f => f.CreationTime);

    return files.OrderByDescending(f => f.CreationTime);
}

Why is there no overload of OrderBy that takes order direction as a parameter?
In Reflector I see that it’s more or less implemented internally but not exposed for some weird reason.

I would much rather prefer writing something like this:

public static IEnumerable<FileInfo> getlist(string directory, string searchPattern, string order)
{
    return new DirectoryInfo(directory)
        .EnumerateFiles(searchPattern)
        .OrderBy(f => f.CreationTime, order == "A" ? SortOrder.Ascending : SortOrder.Descending);
}

Update:

I can write this myself, just was hoping that it’s already in the framework:

public static IOrderedEnumerable<TSource> OrderBy<TSource, TKey>(
    this IEnumerable<TSource> source,
    Func<TSource, TKey> keySelector,
    ListSortDirection order)
{
    switch (order)
    {
        case ListSortDirection.Ascending: return source.OrderBy(keySelector);
        case ListSortDirection.Descending: return source.OrderByDescending(keySelector);
    }

    throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("order");
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T19:23:10+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 7:23 pm

    Since a SortOrder enumeration can technically take on more than 2 values (think (SortOrder) 35) it wouldn’t capture the duality exactly. Having 2 methods ensures there is no ambiguity or need for range-checking (which is missing from your example btw).

    That said, here is the method you want:

    public static IOrderedEnumerable<TSource> OrderBy<TSource, TKey>(
        this IEnumerable<TSource> source,
        Func<TSource, TKey> keySelector,
        SortOrder order)
    {
        if(order < SortOrder.Ascending || order > SortOrder.Descending)
        {
            throw new ArgumentOutOfRangeException("order");
        }
    
        return order == SortOrder.Ascending
            ? source.OrderBy(keySelector)
            : source.OrderByDescending(keySelector);
    }
    
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