I have a document in mongodb that is structured similar to this:
{
"_id": "abcdef01234",
"Name": "Product A",
"Dimensions": [
{
"Height": 3开发者_StackOverflow中文版2,
"Width": 64
},
{
"Height": 16,
"Width": 32
},
{
"Height": 8,
"Width": 16
}
]
}
I also have a class defined to represent dimensions (the sub document from above)
public class Dimension
{
public int Height { get; set; }
public int Width { get; set; }
}
I am selecting the "Product A" document in this manner:
MongoServer srv = MongoServer.Create(myConnStr);
BsonDocument doc = srv["db"]["products"].FindOneById(ObjectId.Parse("abcdef01234"));
BsonValue dimensionsVal = doc["Dimensions"];
Now I have a BsonValue named dimensionsVal which is of type BsonArray. What I really want is a List<Dimension>. How do I convert dimensionsVal to a List<Dimension>?
Edit The dimension class is actually significantly more complex than what I described. I want to keep the Dimensions separate from the Product because of memory concerns. I want to keep the Product in memory, but not the (potentially enormous) list of dimensions. For this reason, I don't want to have a List as a property of the Product class.
Here is how it can be done:
using MongoDB.Bson.Serialization;
MongoServer srv = MongoServer.Create(myConnStr);
BsonDocument doc = srv["db"]["products"].FindOneById(ObjectId.Parse("abcdef01234"));
BsonValue dimVal = doc["Dimensions"];
List<Dimension> d = BsonSerializer.Deserialize<List<Dimension>>(dimVal.ToJson());
Update:
You probably looking for include/exclude functionality. In c# driver it done so:
// load products without array of Dimensions
MongoCursorInstance.SetFields(Fields.Exclude("Dimensions"));
//load empty product with Dimensions and _id
MongoCursorInstance.SetFields(Fields.Include("Dimensions"));
Why not just create class for product? In this case driver will be able to deserialize data automatically :
class Product
{
[BsonId]
public ObjectId Id { get; set; }
public string Name{ get; set; }
public List<Dimension> Dimensions{ get; set; }
}
var product = srv["db"]["products"].FindOneByIdAs<Product>();
var dimentions = product.Dimensions;
But if you don't want create Product
class you can go this way:
BsonArray dimensionsVal = doc["Dimensions"].AsBsonArray;
var list = new List<Dimension>();
foreach (BsonValue value in dimensionsVal)
{
var bsonDoc = (BsonDocument) value;
var d = new Dimension();
d.Height = bsonDoc["Height"];
d.Width = bsonDoc["Width"];
list.Add(d);
}
Try this:
public class Product
{
[BsonId]
public ObjectId Id { get; set; }
public string Name{ get; set; }
public List<DimensionDoc> Dimensions{ get; set; }
}
public class DimensionDoc
{
public int Height { get; set; }
public int Width { get; set; }
}
Product product = srv["db"]["products"].FindOneByIdAs<Product>(ObjectId.Parse("abcdef01234"));
product.Dimensions will now contain the List<> you need.
I would declare your class with a Dimensions property of type List<Dimension> as others have proposed. Then if you want to read a Product without the Dimensions values write this:
ObjectId productId;
var query = Query.EQ("_id", productId);
var fields = Fields.Exclude("Dimensions");
var product = collection.Find(query).SetFields(fields).FirstOrDefault();
// product.Dimensions will be null because there was no data for it
and when you want to read the full product including all of the Dimensions write this:
ObjectId productId;
var query = Query.EQ("_id", productId);
var product = collection.FindOne(query);
// product.Dimensions will be populated this time
This will be much more efficient than reading the Dimensions into a BsonDocument and converting them to a List<Dimension> with hand-written code. That approach results in two copies of the data being loaded in memory (although presumably the BsonDocument version will be garbage collected soon thereafter if you don't keep a reference to it).
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