List<T>.InsertRange Method
Inserts the elements of a collection into the List<T> at the specified index.
Namespace: System.Collections.Generic
Assembly: mscorlib (in mscorlib.dll)
Parameters
- index
- Type: System.Int32
The zero-based index at which the new elements should be inserted.
- collection
- Type: System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<T>
The collection whose elements should be inserted into the List<T>. The collection itself cannot be null, but it can contain elements that are null, if type T is a reference type.
| Exception | Condition |
|---|---|
| ArgumentNullException | collection is null. |
| ArgumentOutOfRangeException | index is less than 0. -or- index is greater than Count. |
List<T> accepts null as a valid value for reference types and allows duplicate elements.
If the new Count (the current Count plus the size of the collection) will be greater than Capacity, the capacity of the List<T> is increased by automatically reallocating the internal array to accommodate the new elements, and the existing elements are copied to the new array before the new elements are added.
If index is equal to Count, the elements are added to the end of List<T>.
The order of the elements in the collection is preserved in the List<T>.
This method is an O(n + m) operation, where n is the number of elements to be added and m is Count.
The following code example demonstrates InsertRange method and various other methods of the List<T> class that act on ranges. After the list has been created and populated with the names of several peaceful plant-eating dinosaurs, the InsertRange method is used to insert an array of three ferocious meat-eating dinosaurs into the list, beginning at index location 3.
using System; using System.Collections.Generic; public class Example { public static void Main() { string[] input = { "Brachiosaurus", "Amargasaurus", "Mamenchisaurus" }; List<string> dinosaurs = new List<string>(input); Console.WriteLine("\nCapacity: {0}", dinosaurs.Capacity); Console.WriteLine(); foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs ) { Console.WriteLine(dinosaur); } Console.WriteLine("\nAddRange(dinosaurs)"); dinosaurs.AddRange(dinosaurs); Console.WriteLine(); foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs ) { Console.WriteLine(dinosaur); } Console.WriteLine("\nRemoveRange(2, 2)"); dinosaurs.RemoveRange(2, 2); Console.WriteLine(); foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs ) { Console.WriteLine(dinosaur); } input = new string[] { "Tyrannosaurus", "Deinonychus", "Velociraptor"}; Console.WriteLine("\nInsertRange(3, input)"); dinosaurs.InsertRange(3, input); Console.WriteLine(); foreach( string dinosaur in dinosaurs ) { Console.WriteLine(dinosaur); } Console.WriteLine("\noutput = dinosaurs.GetRange(2, 3).ToArray()"); string[] output = dinosaurs.GetRange(2, 3).ToArray(); Console.WriteLine(); foreach( string dinosaur in output ) { Console.WriteLine(dinosaur); } } } /* This code example produces the following output: Capacity: 3 Brachiosaurus Amargasaurus Mamenchisaurus AddRange(dinosaurs) Brachiosaurus Amargasaurus Mamenchisaurus Brachiosaurus Amargasaurus Mamenchisaurus RemoveRange(2, 2) Brachiosaurus Amargasaurus Amargasaurus Mamenchisaurus InsertRange(3, input) Brachiosaurus Amargasaurus Amargasaurus Tyrannosaurus Deinonychus Velociraptor Mamenchisaurus output = dinosaurs.GetRange(2, 3).ToArray() Amargasaurus Tyrannosaurus Deinonychus */
Windows 8, Windows Server 2012, Windows 7, Windows Vista SP2, Windows Server 2008 (Server Core Role not supported), Windows Server 2008 R2 (Server Core Role supported with SP1 or later; Itanium not supported)
The .NET Framework does not support all versions of every platform. For a list of the supported versions, see .NET Framework System Requirements.