Skip to main content
Version: 6.X

Pagination

When working with Spotify responses, you will often encounter the Paging<T> type.

The offset-based paging object is a container for a set of objects. It contains a key called Items (whose value is an array of the requested objects) along with other keys like Previous, Next and Limit which can be useful in future calls.

It allows you to only receive a subset of all available data and dynamically check if more requests are required. The library supports Paging<T> responses in two ways:

PaginateAll#

PaginateAll will query all remaining elements based on a first page and return all of them in an IList. This method should not be used for huge amounts of pages (e.g Search Endpoint), since it stores every response in memory.

// we need the first pagevar page = await spotify.Playlists.CurrentUsers();
// allPages will include the first page retrived beforevar allPages = await spotify.PaginateAll(page);

Paginate#

.NET Standard >= 2.1 required

Paginate is based on IAsyncEnumerable and streams pages instead of returning them all in one list. This allows it to break the fetching early and keep only 1 page in memory at a time. This method should always be preferred to PaginateAll.

// we need the first pagevar page = await spotify.Playlists.CurrentUsers();
await foreach(var item in spotify.Paginate(page)){  Console.WriteLine(item.Name);  // you can use "break" here!}

Some endpoints have nested and/or multiple paginations objects. When requesting the next page, it will not return the actual paging object but rather the root level endpoint object. A good example is the Search endpoint, which contains up to 5 Paging objects. Requesting the next page of the nested Artists paging object will return another Search response, instead of just Artists. You will need to supply a mapper function to the Paginate call, which returns the correct paging object:

var search = await spotify.Search.Item(new SearchRequest(  SearchRequest.Types.All, "Jake"));
await foreach(var item in spotify.Paginate(search.Albums, (s) => s.Albums)){  Console.WriteLine(item.Name);  // you can use "break" here!}

Paginators#

Via the interface IPaginator, it can be configured how pages are fetched. It can be configured on a global level:

var config = SpotifyClientConfig  .CreateDefault()  .WithPaginator(new YourCustomPaginator());

or on method level:

await foreach(var item in spotify.Paginate(page, new YourCustomPaginator())){  Console.WriteLine(item.Name);  // you can use "break" here!}

By default, SimplePaginator is used. It fetches pages without any delay.