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Expression<Func> issue

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-02-02 20:45 出处:网络
I\'m hoping t开发者_C百科o explain this clearly and concisely. I\'ve got an expression: Expression<Func<TObject, TProperty>> expression

I'm hoping t开发者_C百科o explain this clearly and concisely. I've got an expression:

Expression<Func<TObject, TProperty>> expression

that I'm trying to get the property name from. All is fine and dandy 'UNTIL', a convert expression is encountered (in the GetPropertyName method - this is where i want to sort the issue) i.e. normal properties may come out as {e =>e.EmployeeID} but in a few cases, I'm getting a result of {e => Convert(e.EmployeeID)}. This in effect means that I can't discern the correct property name (i don't want to parse for exceptions such as Convert() etc).

How can I cleanly extract the expression name as a property. Below is the code I'm using, so feel free to tamper with that:

public static class ExpressionExtensions
{
    public static string GetPropertyName<TObject, TProperty>(
        this Expression<Func<TObject, TProperty>> expression) where TObject : class
    {
        if (expression.Body.NodeType == ExpressionType.Call)
        {
            MethodCallExpression methodCallExpression = (MethodCallExpression)expression.Body;
            string name = ExpressionExtensions.GetPropertyName(methodCallExpression);
            return name.Substring(expression.Parameters[0].Name.Length + 1);
        }
        return expression.Body.ToString().Substring(expression.Parameters[0].Name.Length + 1);
    }

    private static string GetPropertyName(MethodCallExpression expression)
    {
        MethodCallExpression methodCallExpression = expression.Object as MethodCallExpression;
        if (methodCallExpression != null)
        {
            return GetPropertyName(methodCallExpression);
        }
        return expression.Object.ToString();
    }
}

and I'm invoking it as so:

string propertyName = expression.GetPropertyName();
// which ideally should return a value of EmployeeID or ReportsTo
// as per the usage example below

and this bubbles up to some arbitary usage such as:

var tree = items2.AsHierarchy(e => e.EmployeeID, e => e.ReportsTo);

Hope this gives enough info to get me off the noose!!

cheers


You should have a "convert" node in your expression tree, so you should test the node for nodetype "convert", then if true go one level deeper before casting to string. Try something like this:

        public static string GetMemberName<TSource,TMember>(this Expression<Func<TSource,TMember>> memberReference)
    {
        MemberExpression expression = memberReference.Body as MemberExpression;
        if (expression == null)
        {
            UnaryExpression convertexp = memberReference.Body as UnaryExpression;
            if(convertexp!=null)
            expression = convertexp.Operand as MemberExpression; ;
        }
        if(expression==null)
            throw new ArgumentNullException("memberReference");

        return expression.Member.Name;
    }


Have you got an example of an {e => Convert(e.EmployeeID)} operation?

I would guess the Convert is a boxing operation, i.e. it's taking a value type (presumably an int?) and converting to object. If so, and converting from int to object is the right thing to do, the Convert is unavoidable; you should work around it in your GetPropertyName method.

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