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Home/ Questions/Q 3316514
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T22:28:42+00:00 2026-05-17T22:28:42+00:00

I have a simple method to compare an array of FileInfo objects against a

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I have a simple method to compare an array of FileInfo objects against a list of filenames to check what files have been already been processed. The unprocessed list is then returned.

The loop of this method iterates for about 250,000 FileInfo objects. This is taking an obscene amount of time to compete.

The inefficiency is obviously the Contains method call on the processedFiles collection.

First how can I check to make sure my suspicion is true about the cause and secondly, how can I improve the method to speed the process up?

public static List<FileInfo> GetUnprocessedFiles(FileInfo[] allFiles, List<string> processedFiles)
{
List<FileInfo> unprocessedFiles = new List<FileInfo>();
foreach (FileInfo fileInfo in allFiles)
{
    if (!processedFiles.Contains(fileInfo.Name))
    {
        unprocessedFiles.Add(fileInfo);
    }
    }
    return unprocessedFiles;
}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T22:28:43+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 10:28 pm

    A List<T>‘s Contains method runs in linear time, since it potentially has to enumerate the entire list to prove the existence / non-existence of an item. I would suggest you use aHashSet<string> or similar instead. A HashSet<T>‘s Containsmethod is designed to run in constant O(1) time, i.e it shouldn’t depend on the number of items in the set.

    This small change should make the entire method run in linear time:

    public static List<FileInfo> GetUnprocessedFiles(FileInfo[] allFiles, 
                                             List<string> processedFiles)
    {
       List<FileInfo> unprocessedFiles = new List<FileInfo>();
       HashSet<string> processedFileSet = new HashSet<string>(processedFiles);
    
       foreach (FileInfo fileInfo in allFiles)
       {
           if (!processedFileSet.Contains(fileInfo.Name))
           {
               unprocessedFiles.Add(fileInfo);
           }
        }
    
       return unprocessedFiles;
    }
    

    I would suggest 3 improvements, if possible:

    1. For extra efficiency, store the processed files in a set at the source, so that this method takes an ISet<T> as a parameter. This way, you won’t have to reconstruct the set every time.
    2. Try not to mix and match different representations of the same entity (string and FileInfo) in this fashion. Pick one and go with it.
    3. You might also want to consider the HashSet<T>.ExceptWith method instead of doing the looping yourself. Bear in mind that this will mutate the collection.

    If you can use LINQ, and you can afford to build up a set on every call, here’s another way:

    public static IEnumerable<string> GetUnprocessedFiles
     (IEnumerable<string> allFiles, IEnumerable<string> processedFiles)
    {
      // null-checks here
      return allFiles.Except(processedFiles);     
    }
    
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