I'm trying to figure out how to traverse a generic list of items that I want to remove from another list of items.
So let's say I have this as a hypothetical example
List<car> list1 = GetTheList();
List<car> list2 = GetSomeOtherList();
I want to traverse list1 with a foreach and remove each item in List1 which is also contained in List2.
I'm not quite sure how to go about that as foreac开发者_高级运维h is not index based.
You can use Except:
List<car> list1 = GetTheList();
List<car> list2 = GetSomeOtherList();
List<car> result = list2.Except(list1).ToList();
You probably don't even need those temporary variables:
List<car> result = GetSomeOtherList().Except(GetTheList()).ToList();
Note that Except
does not modify either list - it creates a new list with the result.
You don't need an index, as the List<T>
class allows you to remove items by value rather than index by using the Remove
function.
foreach(car item in list1) list2.Remove(item);
In my case I had two different lists, with a common identifier, kind of like a foreign key. The second solution cited by "nzrytmn":
var result = list1.Where(p => !list2.Any(x => x.ID == p.ID && x.property1 == p.property1)).ToList();
Was the one that best fit in my situation. I needed to load a DropDownList without the records that had already been registered.
Thank you !!!
This is my code:
t1 = new T1();
t2 = new T2();
List<T1> list1 = t1.getList();
List<T2> list2 = t2.getList();
ddlT3.DataSource= list2.Where(s => !list1.Any(p => p.Id == s.ID)).ToList();
ddlT3.DataTextField = "AnyThing";
ddlT3.DataValueField = "IdAnyThing";
ddlT3.DataBind();
I would recommend using the LINQ extension methods. You can easily do it with one line of code like so:
list2 = list2.Except(list1).ToList();
This is assuming of course the objects in list1 that you are removing from list2 are the same instance.
list1.RemoveAll(l => list2.Contains(l));
You could use LINQ, but I would go with RemoveAll
method. I think that is the one that better expresses your intent.
var integers = new List<int> { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5 };
var remove = new List<int> { 1, 3, 5 };
integers.RemoveAll(i => remove.Contains(i));
Solution 1 : You can do like this :
List<car> result = GetSomeOtherList().Except(GetTheList()).ToList();
But in some cases may this solution not work. if it is not work you can use my second solution .
Solution 2 :
List<car> list1 = GetTheList();
List<car> list2 = GetSomeOtherList();
we pretend that list1 is your main list and list2 is your secondry list and you want to get items of list1 without items of list2.
var result = list1.Where(p => !list2.Any(x => x.ID == p.ID && x.property1 == p.property1)).ToList();
As Except
does not modify the list, you can use ForEach on List<T>
:
list2.ForEach(item => list1.Remove(item));
It may not be the most efficient way, but it is simple, therefore readable, and it updates the original list (which is my requirement).
I think it would be quick to convert list A to a dictionary and then foreach the second list and call DictA.Remove(item)
otherwise I think most solutions will cause many iterations through list A either directly or under the covers.
If the lists are small, it probably won't matter.
Here ya go..
List<string> list = new List<string>() { "1", "2", "3" };
List<string> remove = new List<string>() { "2" };
list.ForEach(s =>
{
if (remove.Contains(s))
{
list.Remove(s);
}
});
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