I have a View that typically gets query results from a WebMatrix Query (IEnumerable<dynamic>
data type), and displays the results in a table:
@model MySite.Models.Entity
@foreach(var row in Model.Data)
{
<tr>
@foreach (var column in row.Columns)
{
<td>@column<span>:</span> @row[column]</td>
}
</tr>
}
Here's my model where I query the database:
public class Entity
{
public dynamic Data {get; set; }
public Entity(String table)
{
if (table == "User" || table == "Group)
{
WebMatrix.Data.Database db = new WebMatrix.Data.Database();
db.Open(ConString);
Data = db.Query("SELECT * FROM " + table);
}
else
{
using (OdbcConnection con = ne4w OdbcConnection(ConString))
{
OdbcCommand com = new OdbcCommand("Select * From " + table);
command.CommandType = System.Data.CommandType.Text;
connection.Open();
OdbcDataReader reader = command.ExecuteReader();
Here's all the different things I've tried from reading various other posts:
// Atempt 1
Data = reader;
// Error in view, 'Invalid attempt to call FieldCount when reader is closed' (on 'var row `in` Model.Data')
// Atempt 2
Data = reader.Cast<dynamic>;
// Error: 'Cannot convert method group "Cast" to non-delegate type "dynamic". Did you intend to invoke the method?
// Atempt 3
Data = reader.Cast<IEnumerable<dynamic>>;
// Error same as Atempt 2
// Atempt 4
Data = reader.Cast<IEnumerable<string>>;
// Error same as Atempt 2
}
}
}
}
I'm looking for the best way to get the reader object to a IEnumerable<dynamic>
object.
Please note this is a simplified example, and while the reason for the two query types is not obvious, they are necessary in my code.
You're missing basic C# syntax.
Data = reader;
// You cant do this. You have to loop the reader to get the values from it.
// If you simply assign reader object itself as the data you wont be
// able to get data once the reader or connection is closed.
// The reader is typically closed in the method.
Data = reader.Cast<dynamic>;
// You should call the Cast method. And preferably execute the resulting query.
// As of now you're merely assigning method reference to a variable
// which is not what you want.
// Also bear in mind that, as I said before there's no real benefit in casting to dynamic
Data = reader.Cast<IEnumerable<dynamic>>;
// Cast method itself returns an IEnumerable.
// You dont have to cast individual rows to IEnumerable
Data = reader.Cast<IEnumerable<string>>;
// Meaningless I believe.
// The data you get from database is not always strings
The major mistake you make is not calling the method. This is what you want:
Data = reader.Cast<IDataRecord>().ToList();
^^ // notice the opening and closing parentheses
You could go about this a number of ways depending on what is easier to process (say, to display in front-end).
Return data records.
public IEnumerable<IDataRecord> SelectDataRecord()
{
....
using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader())
foreach (IDataRecord record in reader as IEnumerable)
yield return record; //yield return to keep the reader open
}
Return ExpandoObjects. Perhaps this is what you wanted?
public IEnumerable<dynamic> SelectDynamic()
{
....
using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
var names = Enumerable.Range(0, reader.FieldCount).Select(reader.GetName).ToList();
foreach (IDataRecord record in reader as IEnumerable)
{
var expando = new ExpandoObject() as IDictionary<string, object>;
foreach (var name in names)
expando[name] = record[name];
yield return expando;
}
}
}
Return sequence of property bag
public IEnumerable<Dictionary<string, object>> SelectDictionary()
{
....
using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
var names = Enumerable.Range(0, reader.FieldCount).Select(reader.GetName).ToList();
foreach (IDataRecord record in reader as IEnumerable)
yield return names.ToDictionary(n => n, n => record[n]);
}
}
Return sequence of plain object array
public IEnumerable<List<object>> SelectObjectArray()
{
....
using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
var indices = Enumerable.Range(0, reader.FieldCount).ToList();
foreach (IDataRecord record in reader as IEnumerable)
yield return indices.Select(i => record[i]).ToList();
}
}
Return data rows
public IEnumerable<DataRow> SelectDataRow()
{
....
using (var reader = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
var table = new DataTable();
table.BeginLoadData();
table.Load(reader);
table.EndLoadData();
return table.AsEnumerable(); // in assembly: System.Data.DataSetExtensions
}
}
Last but not least, if it helps, you can return a strongly-typed sequence without any manual plumbing. You can use expression trees to compile code at run-time. See this for e.g.