Question

ParallelEnumerable has a static member AsParallel. If I have an IEnumerable<T> and want to use Parallel.ForEach does that imply that I should always be using AsParallel?

e.g. Are both of these correct (everything else being equal)?

without AsParallel:

List<string> list = new List<string>();
Parallel.ForEach<string>(GetFileList().Where(file => reader.Match(file)), f => list.Add(f));

or with AsParallel?

List<string> list = new List<string>();
Parallel.ForEach<string>(GetFileList().Where(file => reader.Match(file)).AsParallel(), f => list.Add(f));
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Solution

It depends on what's being called, they are separate issues.

.AsParallel() Parallelizes the enumeration not the delegation of tasks.

Parallel.ForEach Parallelized the loop, assigning tasks to worker threads for each element.

So unless your source enumeration gains from becoming parallel (e.g. reader.Match(file) is expensive), they are equal. To your last question, yes, both are also correct.

Also, there's one other construct you may want to look at that shortens it a bit, still getting maximum benefit of PLINQ:

GetFileList().Where(file => reader.Match(file)).ForAll(f => list.Add(f));
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