I have
string[] pkgratio= "1:2:6".Split(':');
var items = pkgratio.OrderByDescending(x => x); I want to select the middle value and have come up with this. Is this a correct way to select the second value in an IEnumberable?
pkgratio.Skip(1).Take(1).First();
While what you have works, the most straightforward way would be to use the array's index and reference the second item (at index 1 since the index starts at zero for the first element): pkgratio[1]
Console.WriteLine(pkgratio[1]); A more complete example:
string[] pkgratio = "1:2:6".Split(':'); for (int i = 0; i < pkgratio.Length; i++) Console.WriteLine(pkgratio[i]); With an IEnumerable<T> what you have works, or you could directly get the element using the ElementAt method:
// same idea, zero index applies here too var elem = result.ElementAt(1); Here is your sample as an IEnumerable<string>. Note that the AsEnumerable() call is to emphasize the sample works against an IEnumerable<string>. You can actually use ElementAt against the string[] array result from Split, but it's more efficient to use the indexer shown earlier.
var pkgratio = "1:2:6".Split(':').AsEnumerable(); Console.WriteLine(pkgratio.ElementAt(1));
I don't think you need to .Take(1).
pkgratio.Skip(1).First()
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