I have a vague understanding of the yield
keyword in c#, but I haven\'t yet seen the need to use it in my code. This probably comes from a lack of understanding of
yield
just makes it very simple to implement an enumerator. So if you wanted write a method that returns an IEnumerable
it saves you having to create the enumerator class - you just yield
one result at a time and the compiler takes care of the details under the covers.
One handy case is to write an "infinite enumerator" that the caller can call as many times as it needs to. Here's an example that generates an infinite series of Fibonacci numbers: http://chrisfulstow.com/fibonacci-numbers-iterator-with-csharp-yield-statements/ (well... theoretically infinite, but in practice limited to the size of UInt64).