I currently have two types of Lists: List (named LintMessages) and List (named FilterList).
PCMessages Properties:
public string filename { get; set; }
public int linenumber { get; set; }
public string messagetype { get; set; }
public int messagecode { get; set; }
public string description { get; set; }
public string evaluated { get; set; }
public string comment { get; set; }
Filter Properties:
public bool applied { get; set; }
public string messagetype { get; set; }
public int messagecode { get; set; }
public string evaluated { get; set; }
public string filename { get; set; }
The goal is to exclude PCMessages from LintMessages that fit the criteria of any applied Filter and store them in List FiltLintMessages. For example, if FilterList contains two filters:
Filter1 Properties:
applied = true;
messagetype = Warning;
Filter2 Properties:
applied = true;
messagecode = 12;
evaluated = "WIP";
Then I wish to create a List FiltLintMessages from LintMessages that excludes any entries where messagetype contains "Warning" or where messagecode=12 or where evaluated contains "WIP".
Code at time of writing:
FiltLintMessages = (from mess in LintMessages
from filt in FilterList
where !mess.evaluated.Contains(filt.evaluated)
&& !mess.filename.Contains(filt.filename)
&& mess.messagecode != filt.messagecode
&& !mess.messagetype.Contains(filt.messagetype)
select mess).ToList();
Any help would be appreciated.
/* Edited to work off of gaearon's suggested solution. Stepping through with debugger shows that this is the only relevant code to the problem. The correct items are in each list coming up to this block and on the assignment to FiltLintMessages, two separate filters (exclude messagetype "Warning" and messagecode = 10, both applied) only excludes messagecode=10 PCMessages as it is the last applied filter in the list (tested with several instances of multiple filters). However, the code works with a single applied filter excluding both messagetype = "Warning" and messagecode = 10. Uploading any more of the code would not help and would bog down the post even more (the program is getting quite large). */
IEnumerable<PCMessage> messages = LintMessages;
foreach (LintMessageFilter filter in FilterList.Where(f => f.applied))
{
messages = messages.Where(
m => !m.evaluated.Contains(filter.evaluated)
&& !m.filename.Contains(filter.filename)
&& m.messagecode != filter.messagecode
&& !m.messagetype.Contains(filter.messagetype)
);
}
FiltLintMessages = messages.ToList(); //FiltLintMessages already initialized
messagetype
andmessagecode
should be nullable, because otherwise there's no way to tell if they are initialized or just set to the default values.int?
andMessageType?
(ifMessageType
is enum). Then, in filtering code, check for nullity.(something == false)
you should write(!something)
(“not something”). This is C# idiom and it's hard to read code otherwise.