I want to sort a list in C#.
Like where structure property AVC goes to true then show them first then AVC goes to false. Are any way to do this in C# LINQ?
Well, the simplest way using LINQ would be something like this:
list = list.OrderBy(x => x.AVC ? 0 : 1)
.ToList();
or
list = list.OrderByDescending(x => x.AVC)
.ToList();
I believe that the natural ordering of bool
values is false < true
, but the first form makes it clearer IMO, because everyone knows that 0 < 1
.
Note that this won't sort the original list itself - it will create a new list, and assign the reference back to the list
variable. If you want to sort in place, you should use the List<T>.Sort
method.
list
is List<T>
. Otherwise you'd be trying to assign an IEnumerable<T>
to a LIst<T>
variable. You don't need it if you just need a sequence which will be lazily evaluated every time you iterate over it though.
Jan 19, 2017 at 7:05
OrderBy
returns a sequence, not a list. It sounds like you should be asking a new question demonstrating your problem though.
Jan 19, 2017 at 8:17
Like this?
In LINQ:
var sortedList = originalList.OrderBy(foo => !foo.AVC)
.ToList();
Or in-place:
originalList.Sort((foo1, foo2) => foo2.AVC.CompareTo(foo1.AVC));
As Jon Skeet says, the trick here is knowing that false
is considered to be 'smaller' than true.
If you find that you are doing these ordering operations in lots of different places in your code, you might want to get your type Foo
to implement the IComparable<Foo>
and IComparable
interfaces.
I assume that you want them sorted by something else also, to get a consistent ordering between all items where AVC is the same. For example by name:
var sortedList = list.OrderBy(x => c.AVC).ThenBy(x => x.Name).ToList();
A syntax alternative for the accepted answer:
list = from item in list
orderby item.AVC
select item;
Keep in mind that "list" is now an IEnumerable object and not a List one.