I am having a lot of fun with Linq2Sql. Expression Trees have been great, and just the standard Linq2Sql syntax has been a lot of fun.
I am now down to part of my application where I have to somehow store queries in a database, that are custom for different customers that use the same database and same tables (well, view, but you know what I mean). Basically, I cant hard-code anything, and I have to leave the query language clear text so someone can write a new where-clause type query.
So, if that description was harsh, let me clarify:
In a previous version of our application, we used to do direct SQL calls to the db using raw SQL. Yea. it was fun, dirty, and it worked. We would have a database table fulled of different criteria like
(EventType =开发者_JAVA百科 6 and Total > 0)
or a subquery style
(EventType = 7
AND Exists (
select *
from events as e1
where events.EventType = e1.EventType
and e1.objectNumber = 89)
)
(sql injection anyone?)
In Linq2Sql, this is a little more challenging. I can make all these queries no problem in the CLR, but being able to pass dynamic where criterias to Linq is a little more challenging, especially if I want to perform a sub query (like the above example).
Some ideas I had:
Get the raw expression, and store it --- but I have no idea how to take the raw text expression and reverse it back to executable to object expression.
Write a SQl like language, and have it parse the code and generate Linq Expression -- wow, that could be a lot of fun
I am quite sure there is no SomeIqueryable.Where("EventType = 6 and Total > 54")
. I was reading that it was available in beta1, but I don't see how you can do that now.
var exp2 = context.POSDataEventView.Where("EmployeeNumber == @0", 8310);
This would be the easiest way for me to deploy.. I think.
Store serialized Expressions -- wow.. that would be confusing to a user trying to write a query --- hell, I'm not sure I could even type it all out.
So, I am looking for some ideas on how I can store a query in some kind of clear text, and then execute it against my Linq2Sql objects in some fashion without calling the ExecuteSQL. I want to use the LinqObjects.
P.S. I am using pLinqo for this application if that helps. Its still linq2sql though.
Thanks in advance!
Perhaps the Dynamic LINQ Library (in the MSDN samples) would help?
In particular, usage like:
This should work with any IQueryable<T>
source - including LINQ-to-Objects simply by calling .AsQueryable()
on the sequence (typically IEnumerable<T>
).
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