2

Suppose I have classes Animal, Cat and Dog. Cat and Dog are inherited from Animal. Consider following code:

var query = from animal in session.Linq<Animal>()
            where 
            animal.Color == "White"
            select animal;

How can I add a criteria to above query to query about type of entity? For example something like animal.Type == typeof(Cat).

12
  • couldn't you just say 'from animal in session.Linq<Cat>()' ?
    – Pedro
    Nov 3, 2010 at 17:47
  • If for some reason you can't do what Pedro is suggesting; have a look at my answer to this similar question: stackoverflow.com/questions/3451395/…
    – DanP
    Nov 3, 2010 at 18:50
  • @Pedro: No, I can't. Because type of animal is not known until run time.
    – Afshar
    Nov 3, 2010 at 19:04
  • @DanP: I read that. But I can't change database. It's legacy. I can not add new column to existing tables.
    – Afshar
    Nov 3, 2010 at 19:08
  • 1
    @afsharm - How is NHibernate mapping to concrete classes of Cat and Dog if you don't have a discriminator column? (At least that's what I understand from your statement that you can't change the database.) If NHibernate can create Dog and Cat instances appropriately, then LINQ-to-NHibernate can perform a (from animal in session.Linq<Cat>()) as Pedro suggested. Mappings and database schema would definitely help here. Nov 3, 2010 at 20:11

3 Answers 3

11

This is supported in the new provider:

var query = from animal in session.Query<Animal>()
            where animal.Color == "White" &&
                  animal is Cat
            select animal;
5
  • Nice...been waiting for this to be available!
    – DanP
    Nov 4, 2010 at 0:58
  • is this available only in NHibernate 3?
    – Afshar
    Nov 4, 2010 at 5:40
  • I believe so, but it doesn't hurt to try. Nov 4, 2010 at 10:53
  • So bad, we are in pre NHibernate 3 era yet.
    – Afshar
    Nov 4, 2010 at 13:19
  • Not really. The trunk has been stable for a while, and the final version will be released in about a month. Nov 4, 2010 at 13:54
1

You can map a read-only property that uses your discriminator column as part of a formula. Querying on this column will allow you to distinguish between the types with the current nhcontrib provider.

Further guidance can be found in my answer to a similar question here.

1

The version of LINQ-to-NHibernate that is compatible with NH 2.1.2 does not support querying by type at runtime.

// DOES NOT WORK WITH NH 2.1.2 & LINQ-to-NH
var desiredType = typeof(Cat);
var query = from animal in session.Linq<Animal>()
            where animal.Color == "White"
               && animal.GetType() == desiredType
            select animal;
// This results in an ArgumentOutOfRangeException in the LINQ provider

You can do this in-memory as suggested in the comments:

var desiredType = typeof(Cat);
var query = from animal in session.Linq<Animal>()
            where animal.Color == "White"
            select animal;
var animals = query.ToList();
var whiteCats = from animal in animals.AsQueryable()
                where animal.GetType() == desiredType
                select animal;

By performing query.ToList(), you are reading back all white animals and then performing the type-query using LINQ-to-Objects. (Depending on your exact query and mapping, you may have to worry about lazy proxies and therefore check if the object's type is assignable to the desiredType.) This does have the major disadvantage of reading back more data than needed in order to filter by animal type in memory. Depending on your domain and the query, this may or may not be a big issue.

If you cannot upgrade to NHibernate trunk (aka NH3), I would recommend not using LINQ-to-NHibernate for this query and instead using Criteria.

var desiredType = typeof(Cat);
var query = session.CreateCriteria(desiredType)
                   .Add(Restrictions.Eq("Color", "White")
                   .List<Animal>();

N.B. It should be obvious, but let me just state it explicitly. There is no reason that you can't use Criteria for this query and LINQ-to-NHibernate for your other queries. You can mix-an-match query techniques in NHibernate freely.

1
  • I like this solution because it offers a non-InMemory solution which also allows you to use 'typeof' instead of Generics. I never thought I'd end up using raw nHibernate Criteria again!
    – Holf
    Jul 16, 2012 at 12:19

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