Modifying .NET Dictionary while Enumerating through it

Ideally, it is not advisable to do it. The GetEnumerator() that is called while iterating to the next item will throw an InvalidOperationException. However, from .netcore 3.1 onwards, this will work when you do a dictionary.Remove() or dictionary.Clear() from inside the loop.

Here is the documentation.


Don't, basically. It's explicitly not supported. From the docs for Dictionary<,>.GetEnumerator():

An enumerator remains valid as long as the collection remains unchanged. If changes are made to the collection, such as adding, modifying, or deleting elements, the enumerator is irrecoverably invalidated and its behavior is undefined.

Typically the best way is to remember the modifications you want to make, and then perform them afterwards. Or you could take a copy of the dictionary to start with and then iterate through that while you modify the original. If you could give us more information about what you're trying to do, that would help.

Having said this, the new ConcurrentDictionary class in .NET 4.0 does permit this - but the results of the iteration aren't guaranteed - you may see the changes while you're iterating, or you may not.


You should store the key or object you want to delete and break the loop, and then use the Remove() method to delete the object from the dictionary.

Tags:

C#

.Net