CountDownExtensionCountDownT, TResult Method
            Provides a countdown counter for a given count of elements at the
            tail of the sequence where zero always represents the last element,
            one represents the second-last element, two represents the
            third-last element and so on.
            
Namespace: MoreLinq.ExtensionsAssembly: MoreLinq (in MoreLinq.dll) Version: 4.4.0+6d97c3b1d482f98300f4446df14742b0e3fafbec
public static IEnumerable<TResult> CountDown<T, TResult>(
	this IEnumerable<T> source,
	int count,
	Func<T, int?, TResult> resultSelector
)
<ExtensionAttribute>
Public Shared Function CountDown(Of T, TResult) ( 
	source As IEnumerable(Of T),
	count As Integer,
	resultSelector As Func(Of T, Integer?, TResult)
) As IEnumerable(Of TResult)
public:
[ExtensionAttribute]
generic<typename T, typename TResult>
static IEnumerable<TResult>^ CountDown(
	IEnumerable<T>^ source, 
	int count, 
	Func<T, Nullable<int>, TResult>^ resultSelector
)
[<ExtensionAttribute>]
static member CountDown : 
        source : IEnumerable<'T> * 
        count : int * 
        resultSelector : Func<'T, Nullable<int>, 'TResult> -> IEnumerable<'TResult> 
- source  IEnumerableT
- The source sequence.
- count  Int32
- Count of tail elements of
            source to count down.
- resultSelector  FuncT, NullableInt32, TResult
- 
            A function that receives the element and the current countdown
            value for the element and which returns those mapped to a
            result returned in the resulting sequence. For elements before
            the last count, the countdown value is
            null.
- T
- 
            The type of elements of source
- TResult
- 
            The type of elements of the resulting sequence.
IEnumerableTResult
            A sequence of results returned by
            
resultSelector.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).
 
            This method uses deferred execution semantics and streams its
            results. At most, count elements of the source
            sequence may be buffered at any one time unless
            source is a collection or a list.