24

How to compare two array string using C#.net? Eg:

string[] com1 = { "COM6", "COM7" };
string[] com2 = { "COM6", "COM7","COM8" };

Here com1 and com2 are Array string. Result: COM8. How to achieve this?

1
  • 9
    It would really help if you'd give more specifics about the comparison you want to make. For example, do you regard order as important? Case? What about if an element occurs in com1 but not com2?
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 12, 2012 at 6:33

6 Answers 6

57

Sounds like you want everything in array2 except what's in array1:

var onlyInArray2 = array2.Except(array1);

Of course, if you also wanted to know what was only in array1 you could use:

var onlyInArray1 = array1.Except(array2);

(This all requires .NET 3.5 or higher, or an alternative LINQ to Objects implementation such as LINQBridge.)

I'm assuming that order isn't important when computing differences - Except is a set-based operator, so assumes that you're regarding the collections as sets.

Note that Except just returns an IEnumerable<T> - if you want the results as arrays, you'll need to call ToArray:

var onlyInArray2 = array2.Except(array1).ToArray();
var onlyInArray1 = array1.Except(array2).ToArray();

If you want the symmetric difference, i.e. you only care about which values are in a single array, rather than which array they came from, you could use:

var onlyInOneArray = array1.Union(array2).Except(array1.Intersect(array2));

or you could use HashSet directly:

var set = new HashSet<string>(array1);
// This modifies the set...
set.SymmetricExceptWith(array2);

In all of these, the resulting order is undefined, although in practice Except will preserve the original order of the first argument. While this is strictly speaking an implementation detail, I think it's very unlikely to change.

Like the other set-based operators in LINQ, Except will only return any element once - so if COM8 appeared twice in array2, it would only appear once in the result.

2
  • 1
    His Majesty Jon, adds ever something more ;-)
    – aleroot
    Jun 12, 2012 at 6:30
  • 2
    I think that with your better answers here you could write another Book ... I will buy it for sure !
    – aleroot
    Jun 12, 2012 at 6:40
19

Using the Linq Except extension:

IEnumerable<string> result = com2.Except(com1); 
// result: { "COM8" }
1
  • Suggestion: change result to except (or the other way around)
    – default
    Jun 12, 2012 at 6:43
10

You could use IEnumerable.Except.

7

I think this the shortest way to solve this

foreach (string com in com2 )
{
    if (!com1.Contains(com))
    {
        MessageBox.Show(com);
    }
}
0
3

If you want everything that's in one list but not both, in a single expression, you could use Union, Intersect and Except:

var inOnlyOneArray = array1.Union(array2).Except(array1.Intersect(array2));
1
  • +, that one is smart!
    – user57508
    Mar 13, 2014 at 14:07
1

As others have already said, the Except extension method is definitely the way to go here. I will add, however, that it looks like you might want some control over how the comparisons are made; if 'COM8' refers to a serial port identifier, then you'd want to perform a case-insensitive comparison:

var result = com2.Except(com1, StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase);

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