LinkDotNet.StringBuilder 1.21.1

dotnet add package LinkDotNet.StringBuilder --version 1.21.1                
NuGet\Install-Package LinkDotNet.StringBuilder -Version 1.21.1                
This command is intended to be used within the Package Manager Console in Visual Studio, as it uses the NuGet module's version of Install-Package.
<PackageReference Include="LinkDotNet.StringBuilder" Version="1.21.1" />                
For projects that support PackageReference, copy this XML node into the project file to reference the package.
paket add LinkDotNet.StringBuilder --version 1.21.1                
#r "nuget: LinkDotNet.StringBuilder, 1.21.1"                
#r directive can be used in F# Interactive and Polyglot Notebooks. Copy this into the interactive tool or source code of the script to reference the package.
// Install LinkDotNet.StringBuilder as a Cake Addin
#addin nuget:?package=LinkDotNet.StringBuilder&version=1.21.1

// Install LinkDotNet.StringBuilder as a Cake Tool
#tool nuget:?package=LinkDotNet.StringBuilder&version=1.21.1                

StringBuilder

.NET Nuget GitHub tag

A fast and low allocation StringBuilder for .NET.

Getting Started

Install the package:

PM> Install-Package LinkDotNet.StringBuilder

Afterward, use the package as follow:

using LinkDotNet.StringBuilder; // Namespace of the package

ValueStringBuilder stringBuilder = new ValueStringBuilder();
stringBuilder.AppendLine("Hello World");

string result = stringBuilder.ToString();

There are also smaller helper functions, which enable you to use ValueStringBuilder without any instance:

using LinkDotNet.StringBuilder;

_ = ValueStringBuilder.Concat("Hello ", "World"); // "Hello World"
_ = ValueStringBuilder.Concat("Hello", 1, 2, 3, "!"); // "Hello123!"

What does it solve?

The dotnet version of the StringBuilder is an all-purpose version that normally fits a wide variety of needs. But sometimes, low allocation is key. Therefore I created the ValueStringBuilder. It is not a class but a ref struct that tries to allocate as little as possible. If you want to know how the ValueStringBuilder works and why it uses allocations and is even faster, check out this blog post. The blog goes into a bit more in detail about how it works with a simplistic version of the ValueStringBuilder.

What it doesn't solve!

The library is not meant as a general replacement for the StringBuilder shipped with the .net framework itself. You can head over to the documentation and read about the "Known limitations". The library works best for a small to medium amount of strings (not multiple 100'000 characters, even though it can be still faster and uses fewer allocations). At any time, you can convert the ValueStringBuilder to a "normal" StringBuilder and vice versa.

The normal use case is to add concatenate strings in a hot path where the goal is to put as minimal pressure on the GC as possible.

Documentation

More detailed documentation can be found here. It is really important to understand how the ValueStringBuilder works so that you did not run into weird situations where performance/allocations can even rise.

Benchmark

The following table gives you a small comparison between the StringBuilder which is part of .NET and the ValueStringBuilder:

BenchmarkDotNet=v0.13.2, OS=macOS Monterey 12.6.1 (21G217) [Darwin 21.6.0]
Apple M1 Pro, 1 CPU, 10 logical and 10 physical cores
.NET SDK=7.0.100-rc.2.22477.23
  [Host]     : .NET 6.0.10 (6.0.1022.47605), Arm64 RyuJIT AdvSIMD
  DefaultJob : .NET 6.0.10 (6.0.1022.47605), Arm64 RyuJIT AdvSIMD


|                         Method |       Mean |    Error |   StdDev | Ratio | RatioSD |    Gen0 | Allocated | Alloc Ratio |
|------------------------------- |-----------:|---------:|---------:|------:|--------:|--------:|----------:|------------:|
|            DotNetStringBuilder |   227.3 ns |  1.31 ns |  1.22 ns |  1.00 |    0.00 |  0.7114 |    1488 B |        1.00 |
|             ValueStringBuilder |   128.7 ns |  0.57 ns |  0.53 ns |  0.57 |    0.00 |  0.2677 |     560 B |        0.38 |
| ValueStringBuilderPreAllocated |   113.9 ns |  0.67 ns |  0.60 ns |  0.50 |    0.00 |  0.2677 |     560 B |        0.38 |

For more comparison check the documentation.

Another benchmark shows that this ValueStringBuilder uses less memory when it comes to appending ValueTypes such as int, double, ...

|              Method |     Mean |    Error |   StdDev |  Gen 0 | Allocated |
|-------------------- |---------:|---------:|---------:|-------:|----------:|
| DotNetStringBuilder | 17.21 us | 0.622 us | 1.805 us | 1.5259 |      6 KB |
|  ValueStringBuilder | 16.24 us | 0.496 us | 1.462 us | 0.3357 |      1 KB |

Checkout the Benchmark for a more detailed comparison and setup.

Product Compatible and additional computed target framework versions.
.NET net6.0 is compatible.  net6.0-android was computed.  net6.0-ios was computed.  net6.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net6.0-macos was computed.  net6.0-tvos was computed.  net6.0-windows was computed.  net7.0 is compatible.  net7.0-android was computed.  net7.0-ios was computed.  net7.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net7.0-macos was computed.  net7.0-tvos was computed.  net7.0-windows was computed.  net8.0 is compatible.  net8.0-android was computed.  net8.0-browser was computed.  net8.0-ios was computed.  net8.0-maccatalyst was computed.  net8.0-macos was computed.  net8.0-tvos was computed.  net8.0-windows was computed.  net9.0 is compatible. 
Compatible target framework(s)
Included target framework(s) (in package)
Learn more about Target Frameworks and .NET Standard.
  • net6.0

    • No dependencies.
  • net7.0

    • No dependencies.
  • net8.0

    • No dependencies.
  • net9.0

    • No dependencies.

NuGet packages (1)

Showing the top 1 NuGet packages that depend on LinkDotNet.StringBuilder:

Package Downloads
DccUtils.TypeFormatting

Package Description

GitHub repositories

This package is not used by any popular GitHub repositories.

Version Downloads Last updated
1.21.1 290 11/8/2024
1.21.0 1,262 9/20/2024
1.20.0 9,038 5/2/2024
1.19.1 223 4/19/2024
1.19.0 5,361 3/2/2024
1.18.6 5,079 11/3/2023
1.18.5 2,389 10/19/2023
1.18.4 384 10/14/2023
1.18.3 4,044 9/22/2023
1.18.2 257 9/8/2023
1.18.1 33,742 8/10/2023
1.18.0 24,344 6/8/2023
1.17.0 3,271 4/13/2023
1.16.0 373 3/28/2023
1.15.0 223 3/26/2023
1.14.0 247 3/25/2023
1.13.1 314 3/17/2023
1.13.0 37,483 3/4/2023
1.12.2 293 2/21/2023
1.12.0 918 1/9/2023
1.11.5 338 1/9/2023
1.11.4 338 1/7/2023
1.11.3 335 1/3/2023
1.11.2 337 1/3/2023
1.11.1 352 1/1/2023
1.11.0 332 1/1/2023
1.10.6 332 12/30/2022
1.10.5 321 12/29/2022
1.10.4 361 12/27/2022
1.10.3 329 12/26/2022
1.10.2 369 12/16/2022
1.10.1 404 11/28/2022
1.10.0 388 11/20/2022
1.9.0 389 11/18/2022
1.8.0 381 11/15/2022
1.7.0 380 11/12/2022
1.6.2 394 11/11/2022
1.6.1 403 11/11/2022
1.6.0 371 11/10/2022
1.5.1 394 11/5/2022
1.5.0 381 11/5/2022
1.4.1 404 11/4/2022
1.4.0 485 10/11/2022
1.3.0 477 7/25/2022
1.2.0 537 4/20/2022
1.1.0 511 4/16/2022
1.0.1 477 4/13/2022
1.0.0 485 4/12/2022
0.9.5 472 4/10/2022
0.9.4 508 4/9/2022
0.9.3 482 4/9/2022
0.9.2 469 4/7/2022
0.9.1 470 4/6/2022
0.9.0 510 4/4/2022