XAttribute.Remove Method
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Removes this attribute from its parent element.
public:
void Remove();
public void Remove ();
member this.Remove : unit -> unit
Public Sub Remove ()
Exceptions
The parent element is null
.
Examples
The following example creates an element with three attributes. It then removes one of the attributes.
XElement root = new XElement("Root",
new XAttribute("Att1", "content1"),
new XAttribute("Att2", "content2"),
new XAttribute("Att3", "content3")
);
XAttribute att = root.Attribute("Att2");
att.Remove();
Console.WriteLine(root);
Dim root As XElement = <Root Att1="content1" Att2="content2" Att3="content3"/>
Dim att As XAttribute = root.Attribute("Att2")
att.Remove()
Console.WriteLine(root)
This example produces the following output:
<Root Att1="content1" Att3="content3" />
Remarks
You can use this method to modify an XML tree. This method will cause events to occur.
There are many scenarios in which you might want to remove a set of attributes. In LINQ to XML programming, you should not manipulate or modify a set of nodes while you are querying for nodes in that set. In practical terms, this means that you should not iterate over a set of attributes and remove them. Instead, you should materialize them into a List<T> using the ToList extension method. Then you can iterate over the list, removing the attributes. For more information, see Mixed Declarative Code/Imperative Code Bugs (LINQ to XML).
Alternatively, if you want to remove a set of attributes, it is recommended that you use the Extensions.Remove method. This method copies the attributes to a list, then iterates over the list, removing the attributes.