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?
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.
Using the Linq Except extension:
IEnumerable<string> result = com2.Except(com1);
// result: { "COM8" }
I think this the shortest way to solve this
foreach (string com in com2 )
{
if (!com1.Contains(com))
{
MessageBox.Show(com);
}
}
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);
com1
but notcom2
?