I'm stuck with a LINQ query (or any other efficient means of accomplishing the same thing). Can someone show me how I can select all the items in one list that are not present in another list?
Basically, I have a list I formed by matching items between two other lists. I need to find all the items in the first list that matches weren't found for. Can someone fill in the stars in the second LINQ query below with the query that would achieve this goal? If I were using TSQL, I would do SELECT * NOT IN ()
, but I don't think LINQ allows that.
//Create some sample lists.
List<IdentifierLookupData> list1 = new List<IdentifierLookupData> { /*Init */ };
List<IdentifierLookupData> list2 = new List<IdentifierLookupData> { /*Init */ };
//Find all items in list1 and list2 that match and store them in joinItems.
var joinItems = (from d1 in list1
join d2 in list2 on d1 equals d2
select d1).ToList<IdentiferLookupData>();
//Find all items in list1 not in joinItems.
var deletedItems = (from d1 in list1
***select all items not found in joinItems list.***
Try using .Except
extension method (docs):
var result = list1.Except(list2);
will give you all items in list1
that are not in list2
.
IMPORTANT: Even though there's a link provided to MSDN docs for the method, I'll point this out here: Except
only works out of the box for collections of primitive types, for POCOs/objects you need to implement IEquatable on that object.
Try this:
var List2 = OriginalList.Where(item => !List1.Any(item2 => item2.ID == item.ID));
The easiest way is to use the Except
method.
var deletedItems = list1.Except(joinItems);
This will return the set of items in list1
that's not contained in joinItems
Success story sharing
IdentifierLookupData
implementsIEquatable<IdentifierLookupData>