Say I have a DataTable with four columns, Company (string), Fund (string), State (string), Value(double):
table1.Rows.Add("Company 1","Fund 1","NY",100));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 2","Fund 1","CA",200));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 3","Fund 1","FL",300));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 4","Fund 2","CA",400));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 5","Fund 1","NY",500));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 6","Fund 2","CA",600));
table1.Rows.Add("Company 7","Fund 3","FL",700));
I want to use System.LINQ.Dynamic to build a dynamic query which groups on either Company, Fund, or State, and then selects my group by criteria as the first column, and sum(value):
string groupbyvalue="Fund";
var q1= table1.AsEnumerable().AsQueryable()
.GroupBy(groupbyvalue,"it")
.Select("new ("+groupbyvalue+" as Group, Sum(Value) as TotalValue)");
In the above query, the selected groupbyvalue (Group) will always be a string, and the sum will always be a double, so I want to be able to cast into something like a List, where Result is an object with properties Group (string) and TotalValue (double).
I'm having a lot of trouble with this, can anyone shed some light?
First, you'll access the current grouped value as Key
in your Select clause:
.Select("new (Key as Group, Sum(Value) as TotalValue)");
That should make your query work. The harder question is how to turn the returned objects, which will have a dynamically generated type that inherits from DynamicClass
, into a static type.
Option 1: Use reflection to access the dynamic object's Group
and TotalValue
properties.
Option 2: Use compiled expression trees for lightweight code generation to access the Group
and TotalValue
properties.
Option 3: Modify the Dynamic library to support a strongly-typed result. This turns out to be rather simple:
In ExpressionParser.Parse()
, capture the type argument in a private field:
private Type newResultType;
public Expression Parse(Type resultType)
{
newResultType = resultType;
int exprPos = token.pos;
// ...
Near the end of ExpressionParser.ParseNew()
, we'll try to use newResultType
before defaulting to a dynamic type:
Expression ParseNew()
{
// ...
NextToken();
Type type = newResultType ?? DynamicExpression.CreateClass(properties);
MemberBinding[] bindings = new MemberBinding[properties.Count];
for (int i = 0; i < bindings.Length; i++)
bindings[i] = Expression.Bind(type.GetProperty(properties[i].Name), expressions[i]);
return Expression.MemberInit(Expression.New(type), bindings);
}
Finally, we need a strongly typed version of Select()
:
public static IQueryable<TResult> Select<TResult>(this IQueryable source, string selector, params object[] values)
{
if (source == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("source");
if (selector == null) throw new ArgumentNullException("selector");
LambdaExpression lambda = DynamicExpression.ParseLambda(source.ElementType, typeof(TResult), selector, values);
return source.Provider.CreateQuery<TResult>(
Expression.Call(
typeof(Queryable), "Select",
new Type[] { source.ElementType, typeof(TResult) },
source.Expression, Expression.Quote(lambda)));
}
The only changes from the original Select()
are places we reference TResult
.
Now we just need a named type to return:
public class Result
{
public string Group { get; set; }
public double TotalValue { get; set; }
}
And your updated query will look like this:
IQueryable<Result> res = table1.AsQueryable()
.GroupBy(groupbyvalue, "it")
.Select<Result>("new (Key as Group, Sum(Value) as TotalValue)");