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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T21:14:43+00:00 2026-05-13T21:14:43+00:00

In .NET, the Generics Lists have a sort function that accepts IComparer or Comparison

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In .NET, the Generics Lists have a sort function that accepts IComparer or Comparison. I’d like to sort just part of a list. Hopefully I can specify the start index, count of elements to sort, and a lambda function. It looks like you can only use lambda functions to do this if you’re sorting the entire list. Is that right or did I miss something?

Additional Requirements:

  • Sort in place (to save memory/time)
  • Final list has the same length as the original list
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T21:14:43+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:14 pm
    List<int> mylist = new List<int>() {8,4,6,2,1,5,3,1,7};
    List<int> myRange = mylist.GetRange(2,4);
    
    mylist.RemoveRange(2, 4);
    mylist.InsertRange(2,  myRange.OrderBy(i => i));
    
    mylist.Dump();
    

    EDIT: Think of Dump as running a foreach on the list & printing it to the console.
    And this is changing the content of the original list.

    EDIT2: See if this code helps at all

        List<int> mylist = new List<int>() ;
        for(int i=9999999; i > 0; i--)
        {
            mylist.Add(i);
        }
    
        Console.WriteLine("start " + DateTime.Now.Ticks);
        var extract = mylist.Skip(10).Take(1000000).OrderBy(i => i);
    
        int k = 10; // start from (because we skipped from 10 onwards above)
        foreach(int item in extract)
        {
            mylist[k++] = item;
        }
    
    
        Console.WriteLine("done" + DateTime.Now.Ticks);
        foreach(int item in mylist)
            Console.WriteLine(item);
    
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