MoreEnumerableScanTSource, TState(IEnumerableTSource, TState, FuncTState, TSource, TState) Method
Namespace: MoreLinqAssembly: MoreLinq (in MoreLinq.dll) Version: 3.4.0+b99a6a8cc504caf2d48372fe54a2f8116c59cd0c
public static IEnumerable<TState> Scan<TSource, TState>(
this IEnumerable<TSource> source,
TState seed,
Func<TState, TSource, TState> transformation
)
<ExtensionAttribute>
Public Shared Function Scan(Of TSource, TState) (
source As IEnumerable(Of TSource),
seed As TState,
transformation As Func(Of TState, TSource, TState)
) As IEnumerable(Of TState)
public:
[ExtensionAttribute]
generic<typename TSource, typename TState>
static IEnumerable<TState>^ Scan(
IEnumerable<TSource>^ source,
TState seed,
Func<TState, TSource, TState>^ transformation
)
[<ExtensionAttribute>]
static member Scan :
source : IEnumerable<'TSource> *
seed : 'TState *
transformation : Func<'TState, 'TSource, 'TState> -> IEnumerable<'TState>
- source IEnumerableTSource
- Source sequence
- seed TState
- Initial state to seed
- transformation FuncTState, TSource, TState
- Transformation operation
- TSource
- Type of elements in source sequence
- TState
- Type of state
IEnumerableTStateThe scanned sequenceIn Visual Basic and C#, you can call this method as an instance method on any object of type
IEnumerableTSource. 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).
This operator uses deferred execution and streams its result.
var result = Enumerable.Range(1, 5).Scan(0, (a, b) => a + b);
When iterated,
result will yield
{ 0, 1, 3, 6, 10, 15 }.