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Home/ Questions/Q 5929097
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 22, 20262026-05-22T14:22:36+00:00 2026-05-22T14:22:36+00:00

Excerpt from C# Driver: It is important that a cursor cleanly release any resources

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Excerpt from C# Driver:

It is important that a cursor cleanly release any resources it holds. The key to guaranteeing this is to make sure the Dispose method of the enumerator is called. The foreach statement and the LINQ extension methods all guarantee that Dispose will be called. Only if you enumerate the cursor manually are you responsible for calling Dispose.

A cursor “res” created by calling:

var res = images.Find(query).SetFields(fb).SetLimit(1);

doesn’t have Dispose method. How do I dispose of it?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-22T14:22:36+00:00Added an answer on May 22, 2026 at 2:22 pm

    The query returns a MongoCursor<BsonDocument> which doesn’t implement IDisposable, so you can’t use it in a using block.

    The important point is that the cursor’s enumerator must disposed, not the cursor itself, so if you were using the cursor’s IEnumerator<BsonDocument> directly to iterate over the cursor then you’d need to dispose it, like this:

    using (var iterator = images.Find(query).SetLimit(1).GetEnumerator())
    {
        while (iterator.MoveNext())
        {
            var bsonDoc = iterator.Current;
            // do something with bsonDoc
        }
    }
    

    However, you’d probably never do this and use a foreach loop instead. When an enumerator implements IDisposable, as this one does, looping using foreach guarantees its Dispose() method will be called no matter how the loop terminates.

    Therefore, looping like this without any explicit disposing is safe:

    foreach (var bsonDocs in images.Find(query).SetLimit(1))
    {
        // do something with bsonDoc                
    }
    

    As is evaluating the query with Enumerable.ToList<T>, which uses a foreach loop behind the scenes:

    var list = images.Find(query).SetLimit(1).ToList();
    
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