Question

Is there a simple way to count the number of occurrences of all elements of a list into that same list in C#?

Something like this:

using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;

string Occur;
List<string> Words = new List<string>();
List<string> Occurrences = new List<string>();

// ~170 elements added. . . 

for (int i = 0;i<Words.Count;i++){
    Words = Words.Distinct().ToList();
    for (int ii = 0;ii<Words.Count;ii++){Occur = new Regex(Words[ii]).Matches(Words[]).Count;}
         Occurrences.Add (Occur);
         Console.Write("{0} ({1}), ", Words[i], Occurrences[i]);
    }
}
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Solution

How about something like this ...

var l1 = new List<int>() { 1,2,3,4,5,2,2,2,4,4,4,1 };

var g = l1.GroupBy( i => i );

foreach( var grp in g )
{
  Console.WriteLine( "{0} {1}", grp.Key, grp.Count() );
}

Edit per comment: I will try and do this justice. :)

In my example, it's a Func<int, TKey> because my list is ints. So, I'm telling GroupBy how to group my items. The Func takes a int and returns the the key for my grouping. In this case, I will get an IGrouping<int,int> (a grouping of ints keyed by an int). If I changed it to (i => i.ToString() ) for example, I would be keying my grouping by a string. You can imagine a less trivial example than keying by "1", "2", "3" ... maybe I make a function that returns "one", "two", "three" to be my keys ...

private string SampleMethod( int i )
{
  // magically return "One" if i == 1, "Two" if i == 2, etc.
}

So, that's a Func that would take an int and return a string, just like ...

i =>  // magically return "One" if i == 1, "Two" if i == 2, etc. 

But, since the original question called for knowing the original list value and it's count, I just used an integer to key my integer grouping to make my example simpler.

OTHER TIPS

var wordCount =
    from word in words
    group word by word into g
    select new { g.Key, Count = g.Count() };    

This is taken from one of the examples in the linqpad

You can do something like this to count from a list of things.

IList<String> names = new List<string>() { "ToString", "Format" };
IEnumerable<String> methodNames = typeof(String).GetMethods().Select(x => x.Name);

int count = methodNames.Where(x => names.Contains(x)).Count();

To count a single element

string occur = "Test1";
IList<String> words = new List<string>() {"Test1","Test2","Test3","Test1"};

int count = words.Where(x => x.Equals(occur)).Count();

Your outer loop is looping over all the words in the list. It's unnecessary and will cause you problems. Remove it and it should work properly.

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