Edit 2:
This is probably the easiest way to implement it. I tested it, it works fine. You could generate a infinite number of strings.
public IEnumerable<string> GenerateStrings()
{
foreach(string character in Alphabet())
{
yield return character;
}
foreach (string prefix in GenerateStrings())
{
foreach(string suffix in Alphabet())
{
yield return prefix + suffix;
}
}
}
public IEnumerable<string> Alphabet()
{
for(int i = 0; i < 26; i++)
{
yield return ((char)('A' + i)).ToString();
}
}
Stuff I wrote before:
You could also write a little recursive function which returns any string by a certain index. This may not be optimal performance wise, because there are some repetitive divisions, but it may be fast enough for your purpose.
It is quite short and easy:
string GetString(int index)
{
if (index < 26)
{
return ((char)('A' + index)).ToString();
}
return GetString(index / 26 - 1) + GetString(index % 26);
}
usage (may also be put into another method:
List<string> strings = Enumerable.Range(0, 1000)
.Select(x => GetString(x))
.ToList();
This is working code, just wrote a test for it.
Edit: eg, the "full linq way" application of GetString:
public void IEnumerale<string> GenerateStrings()
{
int index = 0;
// generate "infinit" number of values ...
while (true)
{
// ignoring index == int.MaxValue
yield return GetString(index++);
}
}
List<string> strings = GenerateStrings().Take(1000).ToList();