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ASP.NET Dynamic Linq Search

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-01-29 11:57 出处:网络
var query = (from u in results select u).AsQueryable(); //Build where clause if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(userRequest.searchData))

var query = (from u in results
            select u).AsQueryable();


//Build where clause
if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(userRequest.searchData))
{
    if (userRequest.searchBy == "LastName")
    {
        var likestr = userRequest.searchData.Trim();
        query = (from n in query where n.StartsWith(likestr) select n).AsQueryable();

    }
    if (userRequest.searchBy == "FirstName")
    {

    }
    if (userRequest.searchBy == "Email")
    {
        //var likestr = string.Format("%{0}%", userRequest.searchData.Trim());

    }
    if (userRequest.searchBy 开发者_运维问答== "UserId")
    {
        query = query.Where(x => SqlMethods.Equals(x.UserId, Convert.ToInt32(userRequest.searchData)));
    }
}

First I query the DB and store in var query.

Then if there is search data I am trying to tack on the Where clause using 1 or 4 possible searches.

Help?


I would use .Contains instead.


Don't try to imitate SQL-Behaviour with Linq. You got a list and can query this list based on object methods.

Try this instead:

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Data;

namespace Test1
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            DataTable table = new DataTable();
            table.Columns.Add("ID", typeof(int));
            table.Columns.Add("FIRSTNAME", typeof(string));
            table.Columns.Add("LASTNAME", typeof(string));
            table.Columns.Add("EMAIL", typeof(string));

            // Here we add five DataRows.
            table.Rows.Add(1, "Chris", "Foo", "chris.foo@mail.com");
            table.Rows.Add(2, "Christoph", "Bar", "christoph.bar@mail.com");
            table.Rows.Add(3, "Michael", "FooBar", "michael.foobar@mail.com");
            table.Rows.Add(4, "Andreas", "BarFoo", "andreas.barfoo@mail.com");
            table.Rows.Add(5, "Carl", "Bar", "carl.bar@mail.com");

            Console.WriteLine("//Query ID");
            var query1 = (from dr in table.AsEnumerable() where dr.Field<int>("ID") == 1 select dr).FirstOrDefault();

            Console.WriteLine(query1.Field<int>("ID"));

            Console.WriteLine("//Query Firstname");
            var query2 = (from dr in table.AsEnumerable() where dr.Field<string>("FIRSTNAME").StartsWith("C") select dr).ToList<System.Data.DataRow>();

            foreach (var q in query2)
            {
                Console.WriteLine(q.Field<int>("ID"));
            }

            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }
}

Output:

//Query ID
1
//Query Firstname
1
2
5


Just add to the query as you need to. You can chain multiple 'where' clauses onto it and they will execute in turn.

var query = (from u in results select u);

if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(userRequest.searchData))
{
    if (userRequest.searchBy == "LastName")
    {
        var likestr = userRequest.searchData.Trim();
        query = (from n in query where n.LastName.StartsWith(likestr) select n);
    }
    if (userRequest.searchBy == "UserId")
    {
        var userId = Convert.ToInt32(userRequest.searchData);
        query = (from n in query where n.UserId == userId select n);
    }

etc


Why not give a shot with Expression Trees

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