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I have a text box, combo box, button and DataGridView on a form that is used to search and return customer information from a MSSQL view (vCustomer). It works great, but I know my code can be more efficient. The four items in the combobox represent columns to search.

Is there a simple way of converting the following to dynamic LINQ to SQL? I am new to C#. I checked out some other posts, but I cannot seem to get it working.

public partial class MainForm : Form
{
	public MainForm()
	{
		InitializeComponent();
	}

	private void MainForm_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
	{
		// columns to filter for
		string[] list = new string[4];
		list[0] = "Name";
		list[1] = "CustomerAccountNo";
		list[2] = "Telephone";
		list[3] = "Postal";

		// bind to combobox
		cboColumn.DataSource = list;
		cboColumn.SelectedIndex = 0;
	}

	private void btnSearch_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
	{

		try
		{
			Cursor.Current = Cursors.WaitCursor; 
			CustomerSearchDataContext db = new CustomerSearchDataContext();
			IEnumerable<vCustomer> customerQuery = null;
			switch (cboColumn.SelectedIndex)
			{
				case 0:
					customerQuery = from c in db.vCustomers
									where c.Name.Contains(txtSearch.Text)
									orderby c.CustomerAccountNo descending
									select c;
					break;
				case 1:
					customerQuery = from c in db.vCustomers
									where c.Name.Contains(txtSearch.Text)
									orderby c.CustomerAccountNo descending
									select c;
					break;
				case 2:
					customerQuery = from c in db.vCustomers
									where c.Telephone.Contains(txtSearch.Text)
									orderby c.CustomerAccountNo descending
									select c;
					break;
				case 3:
					customerQuery = from c in db.vCustomers
									where c.Postal.Contains(txtSearch.Text)
									orderby c.CustomerAccountNo descending
									select c;
					break;
			}
			customerBindingSource.DataSource = customerQuery;
			dataGridView1.DataSource = customerBindingSource;
			dataGridView1.Columns["CustomerId"].Visible = false;
		}
		catch (System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException ex)
		{
			MessageBox.Show("An Error Occured - " + ex.Message,"Error", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Error);
		}
		finally
		{
			Cursor.Current = Cursors.Default; 
		}
	}
}
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2 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

Use [System.Linq.Dynamic][1].

Get the condition from a method and use it in a single query.

    switch (choice)
    {
        case case1:
            condition = string.Format("{0}.Contains({1})", "Column", "Value"
            break;
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I found a file called Dynamic.cs within the CSharpSamples files. This file has the proper namespace - is this what you mean? I will try it out. – robnardo Jun 25 at 18:26
yes Dynamic.cs has the Dynamic Linq library – Rony Jun 25 at 18:46
vote up 0 vote down

Hey Rony. I tried your suggestion and re factored my code (see below). However, I receive an error: No property or field 'smith' exists in type 'vCustomer' . By the way, the MessageBox.Show(condition); line returns Name.Contains(smith) which looks correct.

What am I doing wrong? Sorry for being a noob and thanks for your help.

Figured it out... needed to wrap search string with double quotes! Code has been edited.

public partial class MainForm : Form
{
	public MainForm()
	{
		InitializeComponent();
	}
	private void MainForm_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
	{
		// data column to filter against
		string[] list = new string[4];
		list[0] = "Name";
		list[1] = "CustomerAccountNo";
		list[2] = "Telephone";
		list[3] = "Postal";
		cboColumn.DataSource = list;
		cboColumn.SelectedIndex = 0;

		// left, right or middle search
		string[] list2 = new string[3];
		list2[0] = "Contains";
		list2[1] = "StartsWith";
		list2[2] = "EndsWith";
		cboFilterAtt.DataSource = list2;
		cboFilterAtt.SelectedIndex = 0;
	}

	private void btnSearch_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
	{
		try
		{
			Cursor.Current = Cursors.WaitCursor; 
			CustomerSearchDataContext db = new CustomerSearchDataContext();
			//string condition = string.Format("{0}.{1}({2})", cboColumn.SelectedValue, cboFilterAtt.SelectedValue, txtSearch.Text);
			string condition = string.Format("{0}.{1}({2})", cboColumn.SelectedValue, cboFilterAtt.SelectedValue, "\"" + txtSearch.Text + "\"");
			MessageBox.Show(condition);
			var customerQuery = db.vCustomers.Where(condition).OrderBy("CustomerAccountNo");
			customerBindingSource.DataSource = customerQuery;
			dataGridView1.DataSource = customerBindingSource;
			dataGridView1.Columns["CustomerId"].Visible = false;
		}
		catch (System.Data.SqlClient.SqlException ex)
		{
			MessageBox.Show("An Error Occured - " + ex.Message,"Error", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Error);
		}
		finally
		{
			Cursor.Current = Cursors.Default; 
		}
	}
}
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Oh man... if I enter "smith" in the search field it works. So, I guess I just add double quotes around my search string and it will work for all! I tried "o'rei" and it worked! I will update my code. I changed ,txtSearch.Text) to ,"\"" + txtSearch.Text + "\"") and it works! – robnardo Jun 26 at 14:40
Note, this does not work if the column is of type Integer. The double quotes must be removed if the column is type Int. Is there a way to check what the column data type is first? – robnardo Jun 26 at 15:02

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