MoreEnumerableOrderedMergeT Method (IEnumerableT, IEnumerableT, IComparerT) | 
 
            Merges two ordered sequences into one with an additional
            parameter specifying how to compare the elements of the
            sequences. Where the elements equal in both sequences, the
            element from the first sequence is returned in the resulting
            sequence.
            
 
    Namespace: 
   MoreLinq
    Assembly:
   MoreLinq (in MoreLinq.dll) Version: 2.5.0
Syntaxpublic static IEnumerable<T> OrderedMerge<T>(
	this IEnumerable<T> first,
	IEnumerable<T> second,
	IComparer<T> comparer
)
<ExtensionAttribute>
Public Shared Function OrderedMerge(Of T) ( 
	first As IEnumerable(Of T),
	second As IEnumerable(Of T),
	comparer As IComparer(Of T)
) As IEnumerable(Of T)
public:
[ExtensionAttribute]
generic<typename T>
static IEnumerable<T>^ OrderedMerge(
	IEnumerable<T>^ first, 
	IEnumerable<T>^ second, 
	IComparer<T>^ comparer
)
[<ExtensionAttribute>]
static member OrderedMerge : 
        first : IEnumerable<'T> * 
        second : IEnumerable<'T> * 
        comparer : IComparer<'T> -> IEnumerable<'T> 
Parameters
- first
 - Type: System.Collections.GenericIEnumerableT
The first input sequence. - second
 - Type: System.Collections.GenericIEnumerableT
The second input sequence. - comparer
 - Type: System.Collections.GenericIComparerT
An IComparerT to compare elements. 
Type Parameters
- T
 - Type of elements in input and output sequences.
 
Return Value
Type: 
IEnumerableT
            A sequence with elements from the two input sequences merged, as
            in a full outer join.
Usage Note
In Visual Basic and C#, you can call this method as an instance method on any object of type 
IEnumerableT. When you use instance method syntax to call this method, omit the first parameter. For more information, see 
Extension Methods (Visual Basic) or 
Extension Methods (C# Programming Guide).
Remarks
            This method uses deferred execution. The behavior is undefined
            if the sequences are unordered as inputs.
            
See Also