Have you tried just adding another Include
:
Course course = db.Courses
.Include(i => i.Modules.Select(s => s.Chapters))
.Include(i => i.Lab)
.Single(x => x.Id == id);
Your solution fails because Include
doesn't take a boolean operator
Include(i => i.Modules.Select(s => s.Chapters) && i.Lab)
^^^ ^ ^
list bool operator other list
Update To learn more, download LinqPad and look through the samples. I think it is the quickest way to get familiar with Linq and Lambda.
As a start - the difference between Select
and Include
is that that with a Select you decide what you want to return (aka projection). The Include is a Eager Loading function, that tells Entity Framework that you want it to include data from other tables.
The Include syntax can also be in string. Like this:
db.Courses
.Include("Module.Chapter")
.Include("Lab")
.Single(x => x.Id == id);
But the samples in LinqPad explains this better.
In Entity Framework Core (EF.core
) you can use .ThenInclude
for including next levels.
var blogs = context.Blogs
.Include(blog => blog.Posts)
.ThenInclude(post => post.Author)
.ToList();
More information: https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/ef/core/querying/related-data
Note:
Say you need multiple ThenInclude()
on blog.Posts
, just repeat the Include(blog => blog.Posts)
and do another ThenInclude(post => post.Other)
.
var blogs = context.Blogs
.Include(blog => blog.Posts)
.ThenInclude(post => post.Author)
.Include(blog => blog.Posts)
.ThenInclude(post => post.Other)
.ToList();
Include
is a part of fluent interface, so you can write multiple Include
statements each following other
db.Courses.Include(i => i.Modules.Select(s => s.Chapters))
.Include(i => i.Lab)
.Single(x => x.Id == id);
You can also try
db.Courses.Include("Modules.Chapters").Single(c => c.Id == id);
One may write an extension method like this:
/// <summary>
/// Includes an array of navigation properties for the specified query
/// </summary>
/// <typeparam name="T">The type of the entity</typeparam>
/// <param name="query">The query to include navigation properties for that</param>
/// <param name="navProperties">The array of navigation properties to include</param>
/// <returns></returns>
public static IQueryable<T> Include<T>(this IQueryable<T> query, params string[] navProperties)
where T : class
{
foreach (var navProperty in navProperties)
query = query.Include(navProperty);
return query;
}
And use it like this even in a generic implementation:
string[] includedNavigationProperties = new string[] { "NavProp1.SubNavProp", "NavProp2" };
var query = context.Set<T>()
.Include(includedNavigationProperties);
this is from my project
var saleHeadBranch = await _context.SaleHeadBranch
.Include(d => d.SaleDetailBranch)
.ThenInclude(d => d.Item)
.Where(d => d.BranchId == loginTkn.branchId)
.FirstOrDefaultAsync(d => d.Id == id);
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