So I have a SQL view that I've created that provides me what I need. Essentially it's a job position billeting system that shows how many positions have been authorized vs filled (or assigned).
SELECT Companies.Name AS Company, Grades.Name AS Grade, Series.Name
AS Series, Positions.Authorized, COUNT(People.PersonId) AS Assigned
FROM Companies INNER JOIN
Positions ON Companies.Id = Positions.CompanyId INNER JOIN
Series ON Positions.SeriesId = Series.Id INNER JOIN
Grades ON Positions.GradeId = Grades.Id INNER JOIN
People ON Positions.CompanyId = People.CompanyId AND
Positions.SeriesId = People.SeriesId AND Positions.GradeId = People.GradeId
GROUP BY Companies.Name, Grades.Name, Series.Name, Positions.Authorized
Now what I'd like to be able to do is recreate this in a LINQ query. I've almost got it where I need it; however, I can't figure out how to add the counted column at the end that's based on the People table.
Here's my current LINQ query:
var query = from a in db.Companies
join b in db.Positions on a.Id equals b.CompanyId
join c in db.Series on b.SeriesId equals c.Id
join d in db.Grades on b.GradeId equals d.Id
join e in db.People on new { b.CompanyId, b.SeriesId, b.GradeId } equals new { e.CompanyId, e.SeriesId, e.GradeId }
group a by new { CompanyName = a.Name, GradeName = d.Name, SeriesName = c.Name, b.Authorized, e.PersonId } into f
select new { Company = f.Key.CompanyName, Grade = f.Key.GradeName, Series = f.Key.SeriesName, f.Key.Authorized, Assigned = /* needs to be Count(People.PersonId) based on last join */ )};
Thanks in advance for any help you can provide!
Figured it out. The reason why it was posting multiple rows and not doing a proper count on the same row was because in my "group by" I added in "e.PersonId" when it should have simply been removed. I also had to add a few things to make it work on the front-end razor views since it's an anonymous type (this doesn't have anything to do with the original question, but thought I'd give reason to the changes). So the person who removed their answer, you were partially right, but the reason it wasn't working was because of the additional fieldin the group by:
dynamic query = (from a in db.Companies
join b in db.Positions on a.Id equals b.CompanyId
join c in db.Series on b.SeriesId equals c.Id
join d in db.Grades on b.GradeId equals d.Id
join e in db.People on new { b.CompanyId, b.SeriesId, b.GradeId } equals new { e.CompanyId, e.SeriesId, e.GradeId }
group a by new { CompanyName = a.Name, GradeName = d.Name, SeriesName = c.Name, b.Authorized } into f
select new { Company = f.Key.CompanyName, Grade = f.Key.GradeName, Series = f.Key.SeriesName, Authorized = f.Key.Authorized, Assigned = f.Count()}).AsEnumerable().Select(r => r.ToExpando());
And what it looks like on the page:
For example i have 2 model.
ASpnetUserRoles and ASPnetRoles
i want to select ASPnetRoles.Name,ASPnetROles.ID where ASPnetRoles.ID in ASPnetUserRoles.
i only know how to write in SQL
select * from modalA where modelA.id in(select modelB.id from modelB)
if you enable "Lazy Loading" , you can use this linq query :
using(var db = ..."context"..)
{
var q = db.AspNetUserRoles.where(c=>c.UserID = userIdVal)
.select(z=> new { RoleId = z.RoleId
,userId = z.UserId
,RoleName = z.AspNetRole.RoleName
})
.toList();
}
This is what i did eventually.
IEnumerable<IdentityRole> ro;
ro = (from p in haha join ur in aspNetUser.AspNetRoles on p.Id equals ur.Id select p);
Here a generic sample you must create a class (no EF), and store the result to it.
IQueryable<ResultClass> result=from t1 in db.Table1
join t2 in db.Table2
//Here the relation fields
on t1.IdTable1 equals t2.IdTable2
//Here where conditios and/or orderby
select new ResultClass()
{
Field1=t1.SomeField,
Field2=t2.SomeField,
//all need fields
}
Use the result
result.ToList()
I want to compare two lists and assign 1st list to another in case of requirement.
var getdetail=_readonlyservice.getdetail().ToList();
foreach(var item in docdetail)
{
var temp=getdetail.firstordefualt(i=>i.Id=item.Id)
if(temp==null) continue;
item.code=temp.code;
}
I want to implement top statements in linq .any help ?
Think so..
var getdetail=_readonlyservice.getdetail().ToList();
var tempList = from dd in context.docdetail
join g in context.getdetail on dd.Id equals g.Id
select new // Your type
{
// Columns...
Code = g.Code
}
I believe you are trying to do like the way I did, although I was going to join table.
var result = (from e in DSE.employees
join d in DSE.departments on e.department_id equals d.department_id
join ws in DSE.workingshifts on e.shift_id equals ws.shift_id
select new
{
FirstName = e.FirstName,
LastName = e.LastName,
Gender = e.Gender,
Salary = e.Salary,
Department_id = e.department_id,
Department_Name = d.department_name,
Shift_id = ws.shift_id,
Duration = ws.duration,
}).ToList();
// TODO utilize the above result
I was using DTO method to do this. And then you return result(as this case is result).
You may view the whole question and solution here.
As this case, you are not required to put foreach loop, as the query said from every row in yourdatabase.table
Question - how to remove certain records from LINQ, like i have some records i wanted them to be removed from my LINQ.
Scenario - i have table A with 10 records and table B with 2 records i want to remove records that are belong to B to be removed from A [using linq]
-below i have all the records in q and i want to remove the records that are there in p.
var p = from c in q
join dr in dc.TableData on c.Id equals dr.CaseId
select new View()
{
ActiveCaseId = c.ActiveCaseId,
Id = c.Id
};
q = q.Except(p);
You can't do it with the Except as you show, because p and q are different types. But it would also be a bit clumsy.
You can do it in one query:
var p = from c in q
where !dc.TableData.Any(dr => dr.CaseId == c.Id)
select new View()
{
ActiveCaseId = c.ActiveCaseId,
Id = c.Id
};
I'm writing a LINQ to SQL statement, and I'm after the standard syntax for a normal inner join with an ON clause in C#.
How do you represent the following in LINQ to SQL:
select DealerContact.*
from Dealer
inner join DealerContact on Dealer.DealerID = DealerContact.DealerID
It goes something like:
from t1 in db.Table1
join t2 in db.Table2 on t1.field equals t2.field
select new { t1.field2, t2.field3}
It would be nice to have sensible names and fields for your tables for a better example. :)
Update
I think for your query this might be more appropriate:
var dealercontacts = from contact in DealerContact
join dealer in Dealer on contact.DealerId equals dealer.ID
select contact;
Since you are looking for the contacts, not the dealers.
And because I prefer the expression chain syntax, here is how you do it with that:
var dealerContracts = DealerContact.Join(Dealer,
contact => contact.DealerId,
dealer => dealer.DealerId,
(contact, dealer) => contact);
To extend the expression chain syntax answer by Clever Human:
If you wanted to do things (like filter or select) on fields from both tables being joined together -- instead on just one of those two tables -- you could create a new object in the lambda expression of the final parameter to the Join method incorporating both of those tables, for example:
var dealerInfo = DealerContact.Join(Dealer,
dc => dc.DealerId,
d => d.DealerId,
(dc, d) => new { DealerContact = dc, Dealer = d })
.Where(dc_d => dc_d.Dealer.FirstName == "Glenn"
&& dc_d.DealerContact.City == "Chicago")
.Select(dc_d => new {
dc_d.Dealer.DealerID,
dc_d.Dealer.FirstName,
dc_d.Dealer.LastName,
dc_d.DealerContact.City,
dc_d.DealerContact.State });
The interesting part is the lambda expression in line 4 of that example:
(dc, d) => new { DealerContact = dc, Dealer = d }
...where we construct a new anonymous-type object which has as properties the DealerContact and Dealer records, along with all of their fields.
We can then use fields from those records as we filter and select the results, as demonstrated by the remainder of the example, which uses dc_d as a name for the anonymous object we built which has both the DealerContact and Dealer records as its properties.
var results = from c in db.Companies
join cn in db.Countries on c.CountryID equals cn.ID
join ct in db.Cities on c.CityID equals ct.ID
join sect in db.Sectors on c.SectorID equals sect.ID
where (c.CountryID == cn.ID) && (c.CityID == ct.ID) && (c.SectorID == company.SectorID) && (company.SectorID == sect.ID)
select new { country = cn.Name, city = ct.Name, c.ID, c.Name, c.Address1, c.Address2, c.Address3, c.CountryID, c.CityID, c.Region, c.PostCode, c.Telephone, c.Website, c.SectorID, Status = (ContactStatus)c.StatusID, sector = sect.Name };
return results.ToList();
You create a foreign key, and LINQ-to-SQL creates navigation properties for you. Each Dealer will then have a collection of DealerContacts which you can select, filter, and manipulate.
from contact in dealer.DealerContacts select contact
or
context.Dealers.Select(d => d.DealerContacts)
If you're not using navigation properties, you're missing out one of the main benefits on LINQ-to-SQL - the part that maps the object graph.
Use Linq Join operator:
var q = from d in Dealer
join dc in DealerConact on d.DealerID equals dc.DealerID
select dc;
basically LINQ join operator provides no benefit for SQL. I.e. the following query
var r = from dealer in db.Dealers
from contact in db.DealerContact
where dealer.DealerID == contact.DealerID
select dealerContact;
will result in INNER JOIN in SQL
join is useful for IEnumerable<> because it is more efficient:
from contact in db.DealerContact
clause would be re-executed for every dealer
But for IQueryable<> it is not the case. Also join is less flexible.
Actually, often it is better not to join, in linq that is. When there are navigation properties a very succinct way to write your linq statement is:
from dealer in db.Dealers
from contact in dealer.DealerContacts
select new { whatever you need from dealer or contact }
It translates to a where clause:
SELECT <columns>
FROM Dealer, DealerContact
WHERE Dealer.DealerID = DealerContact.DealerID
Inner join two tables in linq C#
var result = from q1 in table1
join q2 in table2
on q1.Customer_Id equals q2.Customer_Id
select new { q1.Name, q1.Mobile, q2.Purchase, q2.Dates }
Use LINQ joins to perform Inner Join.
var employeeInfo = from emp in db.Employees
join dept in db.Departments
on emp.Eid equals dept.Eid
select new
{
emp.Ename,
dept.Dname,
emp.Elocation
};
Try this :
var data =(from t1 in dataContext.Table1 join
t2 in dataContext.Table2 on
t1.field equals t2.field
orderby t1.Id select t1).ToList();
OperationDataContext odDataContext = new OperationDataContext();
var studentInfo = from student in odDataContext.STUDENTs
join course in odDataContext.COURSEs
on student.course_id equals course.course_id
select new { student.student_name, student.student_city, course.course_name, course.course_desc };
Where student and course tables have primary key and foreign key relationship
try instead this,
var dealer = from d in Dealer
join dc in DealerContact on d.DealerID equals dc.DealerID
select d;
var Data= (from dealer in Dealer join dealercontact in DealerContact on dealer.ID equals dealercontact.DealerID
select new{
dealer.Id,
dealercontact.ContactName
}).ToList();
var data=(from t in db.your tableName(t1)
join s in db.yourothertablename(t2) on t1.fieldname equals t2.feldname
(where condtion)).tolist();
var list = (from u in db.Users join c in db.Customers on u.CustomerId equals c.CustomerId where u.Username == username
select new {u.UserId, u.CustomerId, u.ClientId, u.RoleId, u.Username, u.Email, u.Password, u.Salt, u.Hint1, u.Hint2, u.Hint3, u.Locked, u.Active,c.ProfilePic}).First();
Write table names you want, and initialize the select to get the result of fields.
from d1 in DealerContrac join d2 in DealerContrac on d1.dealearid equals d2.dealerid select new {dealercontract.*}
One Best example
Table Names : TBL_Emp and TBL_Dep
var result = from emp in TBL_Emp join dep in TBL_Dep on emp.id=dep.id
select new
{
emp.Name;
emp.Address
dep.Department_Name
}
foreach(char item in result)
{ // to do}