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How to: Count Occurrences of a Word in a String (LINQ)

This example shows how to use a LINQ query to count the occurrences of a specified word in a string. Note that to perform the count, first the Split method is called to create an array of words. There is a performance cost to the Split method. If the only operation on the string is to count the words, you should consider using the Matches or IndexOf methods instead. However, if performance is not a critical issue, or you have already split the sentence in order to perform other types of queries over it, then it makes sense to use LINQ to count the words or phrases as well.

Example

Class CountWords

    Shared Sub Main()

        Dim text As String = "Historically, the world of data and the world of objects" & 
                  " have not been well integrated. Programmers work in C# or Visual Basic" & 
                  " and also in SQL or XQuery. On the one side are concepts such as classes," & 
                  " objects, fields, inheritance, and .NET Framework APIs. On the other side" & 
                  " are tables, columns, rows, nodes, and separate languages for dealing with" & 
                  " them. Data types often require translation between the two worlds; there are" & 
                  " different standard functions. Because the object world has no notion of query, a" & 
                  " query can only be represented as a string without compile-time type checking or" & 
                  " IntelliSense support in the IDE. Transferring data from SQL tables or XML trees to" & 
                  " objects in memory is often tedious and error-prone." 

        Dim searchTerm As String = "data" 

        ' Convert the string into an array of words. 
        Dim dataSource As String() = text.Split(New Char() {" ", ",", ".", ";", ":"}, 
                                                 StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries)

        ' Create and execute the query. It executes immediately  
        ' because a singleton value is produced. 
        ' Use ToLower to match "data" and "Data"  
        Dim matchQuery = From word In dataSource 
                      Where word.ToLowerInvariant() = searchTerm.ToLowerInvariant() 
                      Select word

        ' Count the matches. 
        Dim count As Integer = matchQuery.Count()
        Console.WriteLine(count & " occurrence(s) of the search term """ & 
                          searchTerm & """ were found.")

        ' Keep console window open in debug mode.
        Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.")
        Console.ReadKey()
    End Sub 
End Class 
' Output: 
' 3 occurrence(s) of the search term "data" were found.
class CountWords
{
    static void Main()
    {
        string text = @"Historically, the world of data and the world of objects" +
          @" have not been well integrated. Programmers work in C# or Visual Basic" +
          @" and also in SQL or XQuery. On the one side are concepts such as classes," +
          @" objects, fields, inheritance, and .NET Framework APIs. On the other side" +
          @" are tables, columns, rows, nodes, and separate languages for dealing with" +
          @" them. Data types often require translation between the two worlds; there are" +
          @" different standard functions. Because the object world has no notion of query, a" +
          @" query can only be represented as a string without compile-time type checking or" +
          @" IntelliSense support in the IDE. Transferring data from SQL tables or XML trees to" +
          @" objects in memory is often tedious and error-prone.";

        string searchTerm = "data";

        //Convert the string into an array of words 
        string[] source = text.Split(new char[] { '.', '?', '!', ' ', ';', ':', ',' }, StringSplitOptions.RemoveEmptyEntries);

        // Create the query.  Use ToLowerInvariant to match "data" and "Data"  
        var matchQuery = from word in source
                         where word.ToLowerInvariant() == searchTerm.ToLowerInvariant()
                         select word;

        // Count the matches, which executes the query. 
        int wordCount = matchQuery.Count();
        Console.WriteLine("{0} occurrences(s) of the search term \"{1}\" were found.", wordCount, searchTerm);

        // Keep console window open in debug mode
        Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit");
        Console.ReadKey();
    }
}
/* Output:
   3 occurrences(s) of the search term "data" were found.
*/

Compiling the Code

  • Create a Visual Studio project that targets the .NET Framework version 3.5. By default, the project has a reference to System.Core.dll and a using directive (C#) or Imports statement (Visual Basic) for the System.Linq namespace. In C# projects, add a using directive for the System.IO namespace.

  • Copy this code into your project.

  • Press F5 to compile and run the program.

  • Press any key to exit the console window.

See Also

Concepts

LINQ and Strings