LINQ merge List<IEnumerable<T>> into one IEnumerable<T> by some rule
You could aggregate the Zip-method over the IEnumerables.
public IEnumerable<double> Generator(List<IEnumerable<double>> wfuncs)
{
return wfuncs.Aggregate((func, next) => func.Zip(next, (d, dnext) => d + dnext));
}
What this does is bascically applies the same Zip-method over and over again. With four IEnumerables this would expand to:
wfuncs[0].Zip(wfuncs[1], (d, dnext) => d + dnext)
.Zip(wfuncs[2], (d, dnext) => d + dnext)
.Zip(wfuncs[3], (d, dnext) => d + dnext);
Try it out: fiddle
I guess there is no way around this without extending LINQ. So here's what I wrote in the end. I'll try to contact MoreLinq authors to get this included in some way, it can be useful in some pivoting scenarios:
public static class EvenMoreLinq
{
/// <summary>
/// Combines mulitiple sequences of elements into a single sequence,
/// by first pivoting all n-th elements across sequences
/// into a new sequence then applying resultSelector to collapse it
/// into a single value and then collecting all those
/// results into a final sequence.
/// NOTE: The length of the resulting sequence is the length of the
/// shortest source sequence.
/// Example (with sum result selector):
/// S1 S2 S2 | ResultSeq
/// 1 2 3 | 6
/// 5 6 7 | 18
/// 10 20 30 | 60
/// 6 - 7 | -
/// - - |
/// </summary>
/// <typeparam name="TSource">Source type</typeparam>
/// <typeparam name="TResult">Result type</typeparam>
/// <param name="source">A sequence of sequences to be multi-ziped</param>
/// <param name="resultSelector">function to compress a projected n-th column across sequences into a single result value</param>
/// <returns>A sequence of results returned by resultSelector</returns>
public static IEnumerable<TResult> MultiZip<TSource, TResult>
this IEnumerable<IEnumerable<TSource>> source,
Func<IEnumerable<TSource>, TResult> resultSelector)
{
if (source == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("source");
if (source.Any(s => s == null)) throw new ArgumentNullException("source", "One or more source elements are null");
if (resultSelector == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("resultSelector");
var iterators = source.Select(s => s.GetEnumerator()).ToArray();
try
{
while (iterators.All(e => e.MoveNext()))
yield return resultSelector(iterators.Select(e => e.Current));
}
finally
{
foreach (var i in iterators) i.Dispose();
}
}
}
using this I managed to compress my combined generator:
interface IWaveGenerator
{
IEnumerable<double> Generator(double timeSlice, double normalizationFactor = 1.0d);
}
[Export(typeof(IWaveGenerator))]
class CombinedWaveGenerator : IWaveGenerator
{
private List<IWaveGenerator> constituentWaves;
public IEnumerable<double> Generator(double timeSlice, double normalizationFactor = 1)
{
return constituentWaves.Select(wg => wg.Generator(timeSlice))
.MultiZip(t => t.Sum() * normalizationFactor);
}
// ...
}
This is a situation where LINQ would probably be more difficult to understand, and not buy you anything. Your best bet is to just fix your sample method. Something like this should work:
public IEnumerable<double> Generator(IReadOnlyCollection<IEnumerable<double>> wfuncs)
{
var enumerators = wfuncs.Select(wfunc => wfunc.GetEnumerator())
.ToList();
while(enumerators.All(e => e.MoveNext()))
{
yield return enumerators.Sum(s => s.Current);
}
}