I have 2 IEnumerable collections.
IEnumerable<MyClass> objectsToExcept
and
IEnumerable<MyClass> allObjects.
objectsToExcept may contain objects from allObjects.
I need to remove from allObjects objects in objectsToExcept. For example:
foreach (var myClass in objectsToExcept)
{
allObjects.Remove(myClass);
}
Or
allObject.Except(objectsToExcept)
But it doesn’t work. The count after the methods have execute indicate that no items have been removed.
I don’t see how the first version would compile, and the second version won’t do anything unless you use the result. It doesn’t remove anything from the existing collection – indeed, there may not even be an in-memory collection backing it. It just returns a sequence which, when iterated over, will return the appropriate values.
If you are using the result, e.g.
then it should be fine if you’ve overridden
GetHashCodeandEqualsor if you’re happy to use reference equality. Are you trying to remove logically-equal values, or do the same references occur in both sequences? Have you overriddenGetHashCodeandEquals, and if so, are you sure those implementations work?Basically it should be fine – I suggest you try to create a short but complete program that demonstrates the problem; I suspect that while doing so, you’ll find out what’s wrong.