LINQ - is SkipWhile broken?
- by Judah Himango
I'm a bit surprised to find the results of the following code, where I simply want to remove all 3s from a sequence of ints:
var sequence = new [] { 1, 1, 2, 3 };
var result = sequence.SkipWhile(i => i == 3); // Oh noes! Returns { 1, 1, 2, 3 }
Why isn't 3 skipped?
My next thought was, OK, the Except operator will do the trick:
var sequence = new [] { 1, 1, 2, 3 };
var result = sequence.Except(i => i == 3); // Oh noes! Returns { 1, 2 }
In summary,
Except removes the 3, but also
removes non-distinct elements. Grr.
SkipWhile doesn't skip the last
element, even if it matches the
condition. Grr.
Can someone explain why SkipWhile doesn't skip the last element? And can anyone suggest what LINQ operator I can use to remove the '3' from the sequence above?