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Home/ Questions/Q 702815
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T03:45:45+00:00 2026-05-14T03:45:45+00:00

I have an IEnumerable, listOfOnes, and an IEnumerable, listOfTwos. Assuming that I can compare

  • 0

I have an IEnumerable, listOfOnes, and an IEnumerable, listOfTwos.

Assuming that I can compare objects of V against objects of T, I’d like to find which items are in listOfOnes but, not in listOfTwos. And vice versa.

ex:

        var listOfOnes = new List<One>
        {
            new One
            {
                name = "chris",
                type = "user"
            },
            new One
            {
                name = "foo",
                type = "group"
            },
            new One
            {
                name = "john",
                type = "user"
            },
        };

        var listOfTwos = new[]
        {
            new Two
            {
                name = "chris",
                type = "user"
            },
            new Two
            {
                name = "john",
                type = "user"
            },
            new Two
            {
                name = "the Steves",
                type = "group"
            }
        };


        var notInTwos; //= listOfOnes.FindDifferences(listOfTwos); 
        //find all objects not in listOfTwos. Should find 'foo'.

        var notInOnes; //= listOfTwos.FindDifferences(listOfOnes)
        //find all objects not in listOfOnes. Should find 'the Steves'.
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T03:45:45+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 3:45 am

    If you can convert one of the types to the other, you can use Except and Intersect, for example:

    listOfOnes.Except(listOfTwos.Cast<One>())
    

    Otherwise you can test for each element in the first list if it is equal to any of the elements in the second list:

    var notInTwos = listOfOnes.Where(one =>
        !listOfTwos.Any(two => two.Equals(one)));
    

    This won’t be as fast though.

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