What is the maximum possible length of a .NET string?
The theoretical limit may be 2,147,483,647, but the practical limit is nowhere near that. Since no single object in a .NET program may be over 2GB and the string type uses UTF-16 (2 bytes for each character), the best you could do is 1,073,741,823, but you're not likely to ever be able to allocate that on a 32-bit machine.
This is one of those situations where "If you have to ask, you're probably doing something wrong."
Based on my highly scientific and accurate experiment, it tops out on my machine well before 1,000,000,000 characters. (I'm still running the code below to get a better pinpoint).
UPDATE:
After a few hours, I've given up. Final results: Can go a lot bigger than 100,000,000 characters, instantly given System.OutOfMemoryException
at 1,000,000,000 characters.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
public class MyClass
{
public static void Main()
{
int i = 100000000;
try
{
for (i = i; i <= int.MaxValue; i += 5000)
{
string value = new string('x', i);
//WL(i);
}
}
catch (Exception exc)
{
WL(i);
WL(exc);
}
WL(i);
RL();
}
#region Helper methods
private static void WL(object text, params object[] args)
{
Console.WriteLine(text.ToString(), args);
}
private static void RL()
{
Console.ReadLine();
}
private static void Break()
{
System.Diagnostics.Debugger.Break();
}
#endregion
}