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I'm working with a very large text file (around 70 thousand lines) and I want to remove the top line.

Clearly, loading the entire thing into memory, deleting the top line, then re-writing the whole thing again is inefficient:

var lines = File.ReadLines(accountFileLocation.Text).Skip(1);
File.WriteAllLines("output.txt", lines);

Is there any other way to do it?

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  • Do you have to delete it? How about overwriting it with spaces? 70k lines doesn't seem like much. I'd change it to about 7 trillion lines for impact.
    – MxLDevs
    Nov 14, 2013 at 4:57
  • The top line will have to turn into the second line, second into third, etc. I want to read from the top line, then never think about it again, even if my program ends abruptly.
    – Jon
    Nov 14, 2013 at 4:58
  • I don't think there's a way without a full pass through the file. But the implementation should not load the whole file into memory at once. I'll only enumerate as it goes along. Is the performance problematic in your case? How long does the implemetation above take?
    – Baldrick
    Nov 14, 2013 at 5:00
  • what I think is, use a while loop. before the while loop, do readline() to skip the first line. Then inside the while loop, read line and write line do at the same time. And it seems my idea has been discussed in 'Jon Skeet said : not really' as well.
    – jhyap
    Nov 14, 2013 at 5:01
  • 2
    possible duplicate of How to delete a line from a text file in C#?
    – Noctis
    Nov 14, 2013 at 5:03

1 Answer 1

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Hehe .... finally I can say Jon Skeet said :)

Jon Skeet said : not really

What you did is one approach. The second will have to open a read stream and a write stream (to a different file), and read line, then write it into the write if you want it (more for a "test lines for validity, than a all but the first line).

So ... seems like you got the right answer ...

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