Tuesday, November 15, 2011

Lambda Expressions with Multiple Parameters


Lambda Expressions are getting good recognition among developers and it would be nice to have the next level of information regarding it.

Summary

As you know, Lambda Expressions is an anonymous function that can contain expression or statements. The lambda expression uses the => (goes to) operator.

Example of One Parameter Lambda
var result = list.Where(i => i == 100);

Example of Two Parameter Lambda
var result = list.Where((i, ix) => i == ix);

Code Explained

In the above case the Where() method is having two overloads and we were using the second overloaded method which takes Func as argument.

Lamba1.gif

The first argument is the element itself and second would be the index. The value of index will be passed by the caller.

Applications of Index Parameters

It could be of rare applications where we needed the lambda index parameter. I have seen in many interviews they ask scenarios based on it. Some of the scenarios are given below.

Scenario 1
You have got a list of random integers. We need to find the numbers whose value equals to the index. How to achieve this in one line?

Setup Code

The following code can be used for creating the main list.
IList<int> list = new List<int>();
list.Add(0); // Value = Indexlist.Add(2);
list.Add(2); // Value = Indexlist.Add(1);
list.Add(4); // Value = Index

One Line Lambda Solution
var sublist = list.Where((i, ix) => i == ix);

The Lengthy Solution
var newList = new List<int>();
int jx = 0;
foreach (int j in list)
    if (jx++ == j) // Check index and increment index        newList.Add(j);

From the above code we can see without lambda expressions the solution will be taking more than 1 lines.

Result

We can see the associated result of the console application. The source code is attached with the article.

Lamba2.gif

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