Firstly, I am not sure what terms to use to ask this question, which is probably why I have not found an answer from searching myself.
So I am working with Linq to SQL (C#, .Net 4) and I want to get a list of all users that match a criteria, the basics of which I would do something like this:
var users = DataContext.Users.Where(x => x.Criteria1 == "something");
but in this case there are a few fields I want to match, the thing is these particular fields are a common check and I would like to be able to create a dedicating function that I can use within any of my user queries to check for this match.
To try and explain that a bit better lets give an example: Lets say a user has 5 flags, and I want a common check to see if any of those flags are set. So I could write my query like so:
var users = DataContext.Users.Where(x => x.Flag1 || x.Flag2 || x.Flag3 || x.Flag4 || x.Flag5);
But what I would like to do is seperate out that "5 flag check" so I can use it in other queries too, ultimately I would like to use something like:
var users = DataContext.Users.Where(x => x.Criteria1 == "something" && CheckForFlags(x));
I have tried this by having a function like this:
static bool CheckForFlags(User user) { return user.Flag1 || user.Flag2 || user.Flag3 || user.Flag4 || user.Flag5; }
but I get an error:
"Method 'Boolean CheckForFlags(User)' has no supported translation to SQL."
...which makes sense, but it there something I can do to make this work the way I want it to? Or is this a restriction because I am using Linq to SQL and is in fact something that would work with Linq to Objects?
Predicate is the delegate like Func and Action delegates. It represents a method containing a set of criteria and checks whether the passed parameter meets those criteria. A predicate delegate methods must take one input parameter and return a boolean - true or false.
Predicate in general meaning is a statement about something that is either true or false. In programming, predicates represent single argument functions that return a boolean value.
LINQ (Language Integrated Query) is a Microsoft programming model and methodology that essentially adds formal query capabilities into Microsoft . NET-based programming languages. LINQ offers a compact, expressive, and intelligible syntax for manipulating data.
The neat thing about how LINQ to SQL handles expressions is that you can actually build out expressions elsewhere in your code and reference them in your queries. Why don't you try something like this:
public static class Predicates { public static Expression<Func<User, bool>> CheckForFlags() { return (user => user.Flag1 || user.Flag2 || user.Flag3 || user.Flag4 || user.Flag5); } public static Expression<Func<User, bool>> CheckForCriteria(string value) { return (user => user.Criteria1 == value); } }
Once you have your predicates defined, it's very easy to use them in a query.
var users = DataContext.Users .Where(Predicates.CheckForFlags()) .Where(Predicates.CheckForCriteria("something"));
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