Ok, based on the comments in the answer by Peyman, here is a brute force method, based on the following assumption:
If a given row in table 1 has "Y" in column "A", insert a row from table 2 after the current row in table 1. Take the next unused row from table 2 every time this condition is met.
I will say up front that this is ugly, and prone to a lot of problems, and there's probably a better way to do it (LINQ?), and perhaps an explanation of what Xor is trying to accomplish (i.e., the concept/rules/logic behind it) might lead to better or alternative solutions.
Here goes:
int tbl1Index = 0;
int tbl1Rows = dataset1.Tables[0].Rows.Count;
int tbl2Index = 0;
int tbl2Rows = dataset2.Tables[0].Rows.Count;
DataRow row;
// Do this loop until either tbl1 has been gone through completely or table 2 has been gone
// through completely, whichever comes first.
while (tbl1Index < tbl1Rows && tbl2Index < tbl2Rows)
{
if (dataset1.Tables[0].Rows[tbl1Index]["A"].ToString() == "Y")
{
// Copy the next available row from table 2
row = dataset2.Tables[0].Rows[tbl2Index];
// Insert this row after the current row in table 1
dataset1.Tables[0].Rows.InsertAt(row, tbl1Index + 1);
// Increment the tbl1Index. We increment it here because we added a row, even
// though we'll increment tbl1Index again before the next iteration of the while loop
tbl1Index++;
// Since we just inserted a row, we need to increase the count of rows in table 1 to
// avoid premature exit of the while loop
tbl1Rows++;
// Increment tbl2Index so the next time a match occurs, the next row will be grabbed.
tbl2Index++;
}
// Increment tbl1Index. If there was a match above, we'll still need to increment to
// account for the new row.
tbl1Index++;
}
Wow...that's really, really, really ugly....