Another approach is to use the LINQ Distinct extension method together with an IEqualityComparer<Foo>. It requires you to implement a comparer; however, the latter is reusable and testable.
public class FooDeptCourseEqualityComparer : IEqualityComparer<Foo>
{
public bool Equals(Foo x, Foo y)
{
return
x.Dept == y.Dept &&
x.Course.ToLower() == y.Course.ToLower();
}
public int GetHashCode(Foo obj)
{
return obj.Dept.GetHashCode() ^ obj.Course.GetHashCode();
}
#region Singleton Pattern
public static readonly FooDeptCourseEqualityComparer Instance =
new FooDeptCourseEqualityComparer();
private FooDeptCourseEqualityComparer() { }
#endregion
}
My example uses the singleton pattern. Since the class does not have any state information, we do not need to create a new instance each time we use it.
My code does not handle null values. Of course you would have to handle them, if they can occur.
The unique values are returned like this
var result = fooList.Distinct(FooDeptCourseEqualityComparer.Instance);
UPDATE
I suggest using a generic EqualityComparer class that accepts lambda expressions in the constructor and can be reused in multiple situations
public class LambdaEqualityComparer<T> : IEqualityComparer<T>
{
private Func<T, T, bool> _areEqual;
private Func<T, int> _getHashCode;
public LambdaEqualityComparer(Func<T, T, bool> areEqual,
Func<T, int> getHashCode)
{
_areEqual = areEqual;
_getHashCode = getHashCode;
}
public LambdaEqualityComparer(Func<T, T, bool> areEqual)
: this(areEqual, obj => obj.GetHashCode())
{
}
#region IEqualityComparer<T> Members
public bool Equals(T x, T y)
{
return _areEqual(x, y);
}
public int GetHashCode(T obj)
{
return _getHashCode(obj);
}
#endregion
}
You can use it like this
var comparer = new LambdaEqualityComparer<Foo>(
(x, y) => x.Dept == y.Dept && x.Course == y.Course,
obj => obj.Dept.GetHashCode() ^ obj.Course.GetHashCode());
var result = fooList.Distinct(comparer);
Note: You have to provide a calculation of the hash code, since Distinct uses an internal Set<T> class, which in turn uses hash codes.
UPDATE #2
An even more generic equality comparer implements the comparison automatically and accepts a list of property accessors; however, you have no control, on how the comparison is performed.
public class AutoEqualityComparer<T> : IEqualityComparer<T>
{
private Func<T, object>[] _propertyAccessors;
public AutoEqualityComparer(params Func<T, object>[] propertyAccessors)
{
_propertyAccessors = propertyAccessors;
}
#region IEqualityComparer<T> Members
public bool Equals(T x, T y)
{
foreach (var getProp in _propertyAccessors) {
if (!getProp(x).Equals(getProp(y))) {
return false;
}
}
return true;
}
public int GetHashCode(T obj)
{
int hash = 0;
foreach (var getProp in _propertyAccessors) {
hash = hash ^ getProp(obj).GetHashCode();
}
return hash;
}
#endregion
}
Usage
var comparer = new AutoEqualityComparer<Foo>(foo => foo.Dept,
foo => foo.Course);
var result = fooList.Distinct(comparer);