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I need help with an algorithm that will add an index to the duplicate elements in a string list in C#.

i.e.

A, B, C, D, A, B, E, F, A

will become

A, B, C, D, A (1), B (1), E, F, A (2)
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  • I wish someone would do this with LINQ
    – codingbiz
    Oct 25, 2012 at 13:47

3 Answers 3

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Dictionary<char,int> counts = new Dictionary<char,int>();

foreach (char c in myCharArray)
{
if (counts.Keys.Contains(c))
{
counts[c]++;
myOutputList.Add(c + "(" + counts[c] + ")");
}
else 
{
counts.Add(c,0);
}

}

Added:

What I'm basically doing is going through the array one character at a time. I'm keeping a count of 'times I've seen each character' in the dictionary - which I increment every time I see a new one.

When I see one which I've seen already - I add the number in brackets as requested.

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Using Lamba/LINQ

  string x = "A, B, C, D, A, B, E, F, A";
  x = x.Replace(" ", "").Replace(",", ""); //Remove the spaces and commas
  var l = x.Select((v, i) => String.Format("{0}({1})", v, x.Substring(0, i).Count(c => c.Equals(v))));

  var s = l.Select(c=>c.Replace("(0)","")).ToArray();
  string result = String.Join(", ", s);
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  • Very good, it has helped me to do it with columns in an array (in the same way as the column names in Excel, to use in OpenXML) IEnumerable<string> names = new[] { "Columna", "Columna", "Nombre", "Columna", "Apellidos", "Columna" }; names = names.Select((columnName, index) => { string duplicatedIndex = names.Take(index).Count(item => item == columnName).ToString(); return string.Format("{0}{1}", columnName, duplicatedIndex == "0" ? string.Empty : duplicatedIndex); }).ToList();
    – dgzornoza
    Apr 13, 2018 at 12:28
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var strings = new string[] { "A", "B", "C", "D", "A", "B", "E", "F", "A" };

Dictionary<string, int> counts = new Dictionary<string, int>();
for (int i = 0; i < strings.Length; ++i)
{
    if (counts.ContainsKey(strings[i]))
        strings[i] = string.Format("{0} ({1})", strings[i], counts[strings[i]]++);
    else
        counts.Add(strings[i], 1);
}

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