Class PagedEnumerable<TResponse, TResource> (4.8.0)

public abstract class PagedEnumerable<TResponse, TResource> : IEnumerable<TResource>, IEnumerable

A sequence of resources obtained via API responses, each of which contributes a page of resources. Application code can treat this as a simple sequence (with API calls automatically being made lazily as more results are required), or call AsRawResponses() to retrieve a page at a time, potentially with additional information.

Inheritance

object > PagedEnumerable<TResponse, TResource>

Implements

IEnumerable, IEnumerable

Namespace

Google.Api.Gax

Assembly

Google.Api.Gax.dll

Type Parameters

Name Description
TResponse

The API response type. Each response contains a page of resources.

TResource

The resource type contained within the response.

Methods

AsRawResponses()

public virtual IEnumerable<TResponse> AsRawResponses()

Returns the sequence of raw API responses, each of which contributes a page of resources to this sequence.

Returns
Type Description
IEnumerable

A sequence of raw API responses, each containing a page of resources.

GetEnumerator()

public virtual IEnumerator<TResource> GetEnumerator()
Returns
Type Description
IEnumerator

ReadPage(int)

public virtual Page<TResource> ReadPage(int pageSize)

Eagerly reads a single page of results with a fixed maximum size. The returned page is guaranteed to have that many results, unless there is no more data available.

Parameter
Name Description
pageSize int

The page size. Must be greater than 0.

Returns
Type Description
Page

An asynchronous operation, the result of which is a page of resources.

Remarks

"Natural" pages returned by the API may contain a smaller number of resources than requested. For example, a request for a page with 100 resources may return a page with 80 resources but a next page token for more to be retrieved. This is suitable for batch-processing, but not for user-visible paging such as in a web application, where fixed-size pages are expected. This method may make more than one API call in order to fill the page, but after the page has been returned, all the data will have been loaded. (In particular, iterating over the items in the page multiple times will not make any further requests.)