| Drop Drop[list, n] gives list with its first n elements dropped. Drop[list, -n] gives list with its last n elements dropped. Drop[list, n ] gives list with its n element dropped. Drop[list, m, n ] gives list with elements m through n dropped. Drop[list, m, n, s ] gives list with elements m through n in steps of s dropped. Drop[list, , , ... ] gives a nested list in which elements specified by have been dropped at level i in list. Drop uses the standard sequence specification (see Section A.3.5). Examples: Drop[ a,b,c,d,e , 2]  . Drop[ a,b,c,d,e , -3]  . Drop[Range[7], 2, 5, 2 ]  . Drop can be used on an object with any head, not necessarily List. Drop[list, , ] effectively drops all elements except those in a submatrix of list. Example: Drop[ a,b,c , d,e,f , 1, -1]  . Drop works on SparseArray objects. See Section 1.8.4 and Section 2.4.2. See also: Rest, Most, StringDrop, Take, Cases. Related package: LinearAlgebra`MatrixManipulation`. New in Version 1; modified in 4. Further Examples |