SortedList.RemoveAt(Int32) Method
Definition
Important
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Removes the element at the specified index of a SortedList object.
public:
virtual void RemoveAt(int index);
public virtual void RemoveAt (int index);
abstract member RemoveAt : int -> unit
override this.RemoveAt : int -> unit
Public Overridable Sub RemoveAt (index As Integer)
Parameters
- index
- Int32
The zero-based index of the element to remove.
Exceptions
index
is outside the range of valid indexes for the SortedList object.
Examples
The following code example shows how to remove elements from a SortedList object.
#using <system.dll>
using namespace System;
using namespace System::Collections;
void PrintKeysAndValues( SortedList^ myList )
{
Console::WriteLine( "\t-KEY-\t-VALUE-" );
for ( int i = 0; i < myList->Count; i++ )
{
Console::WriteLine( "\t{0}:\t{1}", myList->GetKey( i ), myList->GetByIndex( i ) );
}
Console::WriteLine();
}
int main()
{
// Creates and initializes a new SortedList.
SortedList^ mySL = gcnew SortedList;
mySL->Add( "3c", "dog" );
mySL->Add( "2c", "over" );
mySL->Add( "1c", "brown" );
mySL->Add( "1a", "The" );
mySL->Add( "1b", "quick" );
mySL->Add( "3a", "the" );
mySL->Add( "3b", "lazy" );
mySL->Add( "2a", "fox" );
mySL->Add( "2b", "jumps" );
// Displays the SortedList.
Console::WriteLine( "The SortedList initially contains the following:" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
// Removes the element with the key "3b".
mySL->Remove( "3b" );
// Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console::WriteLine( "After removing \"lazy\":" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
// Removes the element at index 5.
mySL->RemoveAt( 5 );
// Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console::WriteLine( "After removing the element at index 5:" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
The SortedList initially contains the following:
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
2c: over
3a: the
3b: lazy
3c: dog
After removing "lazy":
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
2c: over
3a: the
3c: dog
After removing the element at index 5:
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
3a: the
3c: dog
*/
using System;
using System.Collections;
public class SamplesSortedList {
public static void Main() {
// Creates and initializes a new SortedList.
SortedList mySL = new SortedList();
mySL.Add( "3c", "dog" );
mySL.Add( "2c", "over" );
mySL.Add( "1c", "brown" );
mySL.Add( "1a", "The" );
mySL.Add( "1b", "quick" );
mySL.Add( "3a", "the" );
mySL.Add( "3b", "lazy" );
mySL.Add( "2a", "fox" );
mySL.Add( "2b", "jumps" );
// Displays the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine( "The SortedList initially contains the following:" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
// Removes the element with the key "3b".
mySL.Remove( "3b" );
// Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine( "After removing \"lazy\":" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
// Removes the element at index 5.
mySL.RemoveAt( 5 );
// Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine( "After removing the element at index 5:" );
PrintKeysAndValues( mySL );
}
public static void PrintKeysAndValues( SortedList myList ) {
Console.WriteLine( "\t-KEY-\t-VALUE-" );
for ( int i = 0; i < myList.Count; i++ ) {
Console.WriteLine( "\t{0}:\t{1}", myList.GetKey(i), myList.GetByIndex(i) );
}
Console.WriteLine();
}
}
/*
This code produces the following output.
The SortedList initially contains the following:
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
2c: over
3a: the
3b: lazy
3c: dog
After removing "lazy":
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
2c: over
3a: the
3c: dog
After removing the element at index 5:
-KEY- -VALUE-
1a: The
1b: quick
1c: brown
2a: fox
2b: jumps
3a: the
3c: dog
*/
Imports System.Collections
Public Class SamplesSortedList
Public Shared Sub Main()
' Creates and initializes a new SortedList.
Dim mySL As New SortedList()
mySL.Add("3c", "dog")
mySL.Add("2c", "over")
mySL.Add("1c", "brown")
mySL.Add("1a", "The")
mySL.Add("1b", "quick")
mySL.Add("3a", "the")
mySL.Add("3b", "lazy")
mySL.Add("2a", "fox")
mySL.Add("2b", "jumps")
' Displays the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine("The SortedList initially contains the following:")
PrintKeysAndValues(mySL)
' Removes the element with the key "3b".
mySL.Remove("3b")
' Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine("After removing ""lazy"":")
PrintKeysAndValues(mySL)
' Removes the element at index 5.
mySL.RemoveAt(5)
' Displays the current state of the SortedList.
Console.WriteLine("After removing the element at index 5:")
PrintKeysAndValues(mySL)
End Sub
Public Shared Sub PrintKeysAndValues(myList As SortedList)
Console.WriteLine(ControlChars.Tab & "-KEY-" & ControlChars.Tab & _
"-VALUE-")
Dim i As Integer
For i = 0 To myList.Count - 1
Console.WriteLine(ControlChars.Tab & "{0}:" & ControlChars.Tab & _
"{1}", myList.GetKey(i), myList.GetByIndex(i))
Next i
Console.WriteLine()
End Sub
End Class
' This code produces the following output.
'
' The SortedList initially contains the following:
' -KEY- -VALUE-
' 1a: The
' 1b: quick
' 1c: brown
' 2a: fox
' 2b: jumps
' 2c: over
' 3a: the
' 3b: lazy
' 3c: dog
'
' After removing "lazy":
' -KEY- -VALUE-
' 1a: The
' 1b: quick
' 1c: brown
' 2a: fox
' 2b: jumps
' 2c: over
' 3a: the
' 3c: dog
'
' After removing the element at index 5:
' -KEY- -VALUE-
' 1a: The
' 1b: quick
' 1c: brown
' 2a: fox
' 2b: jumps
' 3a: the
' 3c: dog
Remarks
The index sequence is based on the sort sequence. When an element is added, it is inserted into SortedList in the correct sort order, and the indexing adjusts accordingly. When an element is removed, the indexing also adjusts accordingly. Therefore, the index of a specific key/value pair might change as elements are added or removed from the SortedList object.
In collections of contiguous elements, such as lists, the elements that follow the removed element move up to occupy the vacated spot. If the collection is indexed, the indexes of the elements that are moved are also updated. This behavior does not apply to collections where elements are conceptually grouped into buckets, such as a hash table.
This method is an O(n)
operation, where n
is Count.