8

I have 2 bool flags and need to filter my collection accordingly. There has to be an cleaner way to do this. If anyone can point me in the right direction I'd appreciate it. Thanks.

var _filteredEvents = from ev in _events 
                      select ev;
if (!queueEmail) // don't queue email
{
    if (!queueTextMessaging) // don't queue textmessaging
    {
        _filteredEvents = from ev in _events
                              where ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.TextMessage.ToString() 
                                && ev.QueueTypeEnumText !=QueueType.Email.ToString()
                              select ev;
    }
    else
    {
         _filteredEvents = from ev in _events
                              where ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.Email.ToString()
                              select ev;
    }
}
else //queue email
{
    if (!queueTextMessaging) //don't queue textmessaging
    {
        _filteredEvents = from ev in _events
                          where ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.TextMessage.ToString()
                          select ev;
    }
}

4 Answers 4

9

Since LINQ uses deferred execution, you can just change the Where() extensions onto your object, and reassign it as you go:

var _filteredEvents = _events; 
if (!queueEmail)
     _filteredEvents =  _filteredEvents.Where(ev => ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.Email.ToString());
if (!queueTextMessaging)
     _filteredEvents =  _filteredEvents.Where(ev => ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.TextMessage.ToString());
3
  • Can someone elaborate on this a little bit? I am interested. How exactly is this working. Maybe I don't fully understand deferred execution. A brief explanation would be splendid. Maybe just walk me through each line and explain what's happening. Is the second IF adding a .Where() to the .Where() that is already there from the first IF? I was under the impression you couldn't assign a generic var after it had been initialized.
    – CatDadCode
    Mar 14, 2011 at 18:40
  • This is awesome, thanks! I did get an error because I was using a strongly typed collection so I updated line 1 to "_events.AsEnumerable()" and it went away. Error was "Cannot implicitly convert type. 'System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable..." Mar 14, 2011 at 18:47
  • 1
    @Chevex: You can reassign to a "var" - but you can't change it's type. If the original var is IEnumerable<T>, then you can assign "over it" as much as you'd like. By calling _filteredEvents.Where(), we return a new IEnumerable<T>, and just replace the reference in _filteredEvents. This can be done as many times as you want, since the execution of the "query" doesn't actually occur until you enumerate the collection. This means, when we finally do the enumeration (after the above code), all of the where clauses will get executed as well as the original "select" if its required. Mar 14, 2011 at 18:50
2

You can make one where clause:

where 
     (queueTextMessaging || ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.TextMessage.ToString())
   &&(queueEmail || ev.QueueTypeEnumText !=QueueType.Email.ToString())
1
  • Thanks Mark! You and Jon had the same idea. Both were useful to me. Mar 14, 2011 at 18:51
2
var _filteredEvents =
  from ev in _events where (
    queueTextMessaging || ev.QueueTypeEnumText != QueueType.TextMessage.ToString() &&
    queueEmail || ev.QueueTypeEnumText !=QueueType.Email.ToString())
  select ev;
1
  • I really like this solution as well. Thanks Jon! Mar 14, 2011 at 18:50
0

I would simply create a Method testing the condition for you

var _filteredEvents = from ev in _events where Test(queueEmail, queueTextMessaging, ev) select ev;

...

bool Test(bool foo, bool bar, Event ev) {...}

0

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.