5

Let's say I have an object:

public class CustomObj
{
    DateTime Date { get; set; }
    String Name { get; set; }
}

Then let's say I have a List with 20 various elements.

var stuff = new List<CustomObj>
{
    { Date = DateTime.Now, Name = "Joe" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(1), Name = "Joe2" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(2), Name = "Joe3" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(3), Name = "Joe4" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(4), Name = "Joe5" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(5), Name = "Joe6" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(6), Name = "Joe7" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(7), Name = "Joe8" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(8), Name = "Joe9" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(9), Name = "Joe10" },
    { Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(10), Name = "Joe11" }
}

How can I remove the 3 oldest elements?

stuff.RemoveAll(item => ???)
3
  • if you iterate over the list to remove items, make sure you use an for and not a foreeach.
    – jim
    Nov 8, 2009 at 7:49
  • If "oldest" is for "first in", the simplest solution should be a "first-in, first-out" approach: use a Queue. Jun 11, 2013 at 14:35
  • Excellent question, easy to understand the use case, and made it really easy for me as a reader to find the right answer. Thanks for asking the way you did.
    – joelc
    Nov 1, 2015 at 21:42

5 Answers 5

8

If you only need to enumerate the items, this will work:

stuff.OrderBy(item => item.Date).Skip(3);

If you actually want it in list form you will have to call .ToList() afterwards:

stuff = stuff.OrderBy(item => item.Date).Skip(3).ToList();
5
  • 1
    it does not remove the items, just skips them and does what with the return value? Nov 8, 2009 at 8:01
  • He probably wants to do a .ToList() after it.
    – Dykam
    Nov 8, 2009 at 8:12
  • 1
    It doesn't remove the items from the source list, but the OP could assign the return value to something else, e.g. call ToList and then reassign to the stuff variable.
    – Jon Skeet
    Nov 8, 2009 at 8:12
  • True. It ain't the most efficient method, but it is the cleanest.
    – Dykam
    Nov 8, 2009 at 8:14
  • Damn my items don't have a Date... :|
    – Ms. Nobody
    Jun 11, 2013 at 7:48
4

If you're willing to replace the list with a new one, you could try this:

stuff = stuff.OrderBy( c => c.Date).Skip(3).ToList();

On the other hand, if you need stuff to remain the same exact List<T> instance, you could sort it and then remove a range by index:

stuff.Sort(...);
stuff.RemoveRange(0, 3);
3

If your list is ordered you could simply use the RemoveRange method:

int n = 3;
stuff.RemoveRange(stuff.Count - n, n);
1
  • 3
    it should be ordered first, then we remove last 3 Nov 8, 2009 at 7:44
1
const int cToRemove = 3;

var top3 = (from c in stuff
        orderby c.Date ascending
        select c).Take(cToRemove);
1

All the other answers so far have relied on sorting the list, which is an O(n log n) operation if you don't already have it sorted.

Here's a solution which is O(n) albeit it with a horrible constant factor. It uses MinBy from MoreLINQ - you could easily rewrite that in your own code if you need to, and even make it return the index directly instead of the value (and useRemoveAt instead of Remove).

// The list.Count part is in case the list starts off with
// fewer than 3 elements
for (int i = 0; i < 3 && list.Count > 0; i++)
{
    var oldest = list.MinBy(x => x.Date);
    list.Remove(oldest);
}

You could certainly write this more efficiently to find the oldest three elements in a single pass of the list - but the code would be significantly more complicated, leading to more chances for errors. The above should work fine in O(n), even if it's lacking in elegance when you think of it going through the list 6 times :)

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