I am looking for a better pattern for working with a list of elements which each need processed and then depending on the outcome are removed from the list.
You can't use .Remove(element)
inside a foreach (var element in X)
(because it results in Collection was modified; enumeration operation may not execute.
exception)... you also can't use for (int i = 0; i < elements.Count(); i++)
and .RemoveAt(i)
because it disrupts your current position in the collection relative to i
.
Is there an elegant way to do this?
Iterate your list in reverse with a for loop:
for (int i = safePendingList.Count - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
// some code
// safePendingList.RemoveAt(i);
}
Example:
var list = new List<int>(Enumerable.Range(1, 10));
for (int i = list.Count - 1; i >= 0; i--)
{
if (list[i] > 5)
list.RemoveAt(i);
}
list.ForEach(i => Console.WriteLine(i));
Alternately, you can use the RemoveAll method with a predicate to test against:
safePendingList.RemoveAll(item => item.Value == someValue);
Here's a simplified example to demonstrate:
var list = new List<int>(Enumerable.Range(1, 10));
Console.WriteLine("Before:");
list.ForEach(i => Console.WriteLine(i));
list.RemoveAll(i => i > 5);
Console.WriteLine("After:");
list.ForEach(i => Console.WriteLine(i));