Please explain System.Linq.Enumerable.Where(Func<T, int, bool> predicate)

元气小坏坏 提交于 2019-12-05 17:31:50

The int parameter represents the index of the current item within the current iteration. Each time you call one of the LINQ extension methods, you aren't in theory guaranteed to get the items returned in the same order, but you know they're all be returned once each and thus can be assigned indices. (Well, you are guaranteed if you know the query object is a List<T> or such, but not in general.)

Example:

var result1 = myEnumerable.Where((item, index) => index < 4);
var result2 = myEnumerable.Take(4);
// result1 and result2 are equivalent.

You can't index an IEnumerable<T> in the same way you can an array, but you might be able to use the index to filter the list in some way, or possibly to index some data in another collection which will be used in the condition.

EDIT: As an example, to skip every other element you could use:

var results = sequence.Where((item, idx) => idx % 2 == 0);
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