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I've been looking at Dynamic Linq today (installed into VS via NuGet)...but all the examples I have found so far assume OrderBy is to be done on a known property or column name; however I am trying to OrderBy a field which is not strongly typed; but actually a key value of a row object which is derived from a Dictionary; e.g.

class RowValues : Dictionary<string, string>
{
...
}

So the list to be ordered is specifically a list of RowValues objects, filled with Name,Value pairs. For a given list of RowValues, the OrderBy field could by any of keys of the named value pairs entries (fyi: I want the orderby field to be specified in an xml config file ultimately so the ordering can be changed without re-deployment of binaries etc).

I've got a hunch the solution lies in writing a custom ordering function passed to the OrderBy??? This function would obviously know how to get a specific value from the RowValues object given a field name from the xml config....?? The answers I have seen so far show passing a string which contains a custom order by clause into the OrderBy, which is close to where I want to be, but how in my case would the runtime know where to find the fields referred to in the OrderBy string??

Input will be very much appreciated, or have I completely misunderstand the Dynamic Linq functions?

2 Answers 2

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If you're using dynamic LINQ, it would just be:

var sortColumn = GetConfigValue(...);
var sorted = RowValues.OrderBy(sortColumn);

You could of course use a concatenated string to create a multiple sort ("column1, column2 DESC"). As far as I'm aware, there's no custom sort function unless you're using regular LINQ.

Also, I would make sure you know the performance characteristics of Dynamic LINQ.


Edit:

Is this what you're looking for? This will order it based on the value of the "Key" entry in the dictionary. If you need multiple sort by-s, you can use it in a loop with .ThenBy()

void Main()
{
    List<RowValues> v = new List<RowValues>();
    var key = "Key"; //GetFromConfig();

    var v1 = new RowValues();
    v1.Add("Key", "1");
    v1.Add("3", "5");

    var v2 = new RowValues();
    v2.Add("Key", "3");
    v2.Add("2", "2");

    var v3 = new RowValues();
    v3.Add("Key", "2");
    v3.Add("2", "2");

    v.Add(v1);
    v.Add(v2);
    v.Add(v3);

    v.OrderBy(r => r[key]).Dump();
}

class RowValues : Dictionary<string, string>
{

}
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  • Appreciate you answer Kyle :-) however my interpretation of your code in my solution resulted in exceptions as the runtime was unable to find a property on the row which matched the specified sort column name. This is because the rows themselves are simply Dictionary<string, string> derived objects. This brings me back to my original issue of applying dynamic linq syntax to rows of key,value pairs instead of concrete property names which map to "columns". I don't think my explanation of the issue is great tbh, and I have found a solution which I will write-up and post asap.
    – Toadfather
    Aug 29, 2014 at 10:55
  • @Toadfather let me know if the second code is what you're looking for. I don't think your explanation is great either ;), but I think we can get to the root issue.
    – Kyle W
    Sep 2, 2014 at 14:35
  • @Toadfather I don't know what that means.
    – Kyle W
    Sep 18, 2014 at 13:52
  • See answer below, although it was deleted once by a mod (I assume) due to use of the word "thanks".
    – Toadfather
    Sep 23, 2014 at 14:16
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Kyle, thanks again. Apologies for late reply, I have moved on from this issue now but out of interest and courtesy I wanted to come back and agree your code is much closer to where I wanted to get to, but we have lost the dynamic linq aspect. So, where you are calling the OrderBy and ordering on the key, I would want to pass a string containing the order command e.g "r[key] desc". The reason being I would want to leave the determination as to which direction to order until runtime. I suspect ths would be accomplished using an expression tree possibly? e.g: here

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  • 1
    Please don't add "thank you" as an answer. Once you have sufficient reputation, you will be able to vote up questions and answers that you found helpful.
    – Ryan Gates
    Sep 17, 2014 at 17:36
  • Ok, this is what happened. I wanted to add the "thanks" as a comment, but I could'nt figure out how to get the code markup formatting in a comment (as my response included one line of code which I wanted to show nicely formatted), so I created an answer. I see in the help guide this is not recommended practice, fine, but how do I reply to an answer and include code formatting?
    – Toadfather
    Sep 23, 2014 at 14:20
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    RowValues.OrderBy(r[key] + " desc"); ? If the only issue you have is that you want to save the order until runtime, I would use an if statement and do OrderBy or OrderByDescending. It will be faster as well as easier to maintain.
    – Kyle W
    Sep 23, 2014 at 15:12
  • Additionally when responding to someone's comment, make sure to include @[username] such as @Toadfather.
    – Ryan Gates
    Sep 23, 2014 at 18:23

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