Okay, so let's say I have a List<car>
. Each car also contains a List<part>
. Each part has an ID
associated with it. I'm only given the ID
to a part
, and I want to find the car
that contains that part
. What is the best way to find this car
?
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Do you want to find the first car or all cars with that part?– NogwaterJul 27, 2012 at 17:02
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@Nogwater Each part has a unique identifier across all cars so there will be only one car with that part– proseidonJul 27, 2012 at 17:02
6 Answers
How about with LINQ?
List<Car> cars = ...
var carToFind = cars.FirstOrDefault(car => car.Parts.Any(part => part.Id == idToFind));
In English: "Find the first car (or null if no such car exists) that has any part with an Id matching the desired Id."
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I was thinking the same thing, then did
ToArray()
because I couldn't think of usingAny
.– MatthewJul 27, 2012 at 17:12
var id = 123;
var cars = new List<Car>();
var theCar = cars.Single(
car => car.parts
.FirstOrDefault(part => part.Id == id) != null
);
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3This will throw an exception if there is more than one car found. You might want to remove the Single() call. Also, Contains would not work in this situation (unless you implemented your own version).– jsmithJul 27, 2012 at 17:06
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@Guvante the error here is 'Cannot resolve method Contains(int), candidates are Contains(part). Jul 27, 2012 at 17:08
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Part is an object, and you're passing an Int to Contains. You should create and Part, and assign the Id with the IdToSearch. but I'm not sure if Contains compare all attributes, and don't know how many attributes got each Part Jul 27, 2012 at 17:13
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@jsmith: That was intentional, "Each part has a unique identifier across all cars so there will be only one car with that part", if the design calls for unique, no reason to be ambiguous with it.– GuvanteJul 27, 2012 at 17:38
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@proseidon: Sorry, for some reason I thought you were storing part ids.– GuvanteJul 27, 2012 at 17:39
You could do a LINQ query like this:
// List<car> cars;
int id = 101;
var result = Cars.Where (c => c.parts.Where (p => p.ID == id).Any ());
How about:
foreach(Car car in listOfCars)
{
if (car.parts.Contains(partID))
{
return car;
}
}
Edit2: Ah, I misunderstood and thought that your car had a list of partIDs.
So, in that case...
foreach(Car car in listOfCars)
{
foreach(Part part in car.parts)
{
if (part.id == partId)
{
return car;
}
}
}
Edit1: Depending on your use case, it might also make sense to maintain an "index" that maps from part IDs to cars. Something like:
var partIDToCar = Dictionary<string, Car>();
As you are putting parts in your cars, you update your index:
partIDToCar[partID] = car;
Then, it's a quick check to get the car:
if (partIDToCar.ContainsKey(partID))
{
return partIDToCar[partID];
}
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Unfortunately this does not work as .Contains expects the type part as opposed to an attribute in a part Jul 27, 2012 at 17:07
Find within a Find
List<car> cars = new List<Car>();
List<car> carWithParts = cars.Find(x => x.parts.Any(y => y.PartID=123));
This will work if multiple cars could contain the same PartID.
var thePart;
foreach (var part in list<parts>)
{
if (part.id = ID)
thePart = part;
}
foreach (var car in list<cars>)
{
if (car.Part = thePart)
return car;
}
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Unfortunately I cannot directly access parts - I have to go through cars. Jul 27, 2012 at 17:05