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I want to display a customer's accounting history in a DataGridView and I want to have a column that displays the running total for their balance. The old way I did this was by getting the data, looping through the data, and adding rows to the DataGridView one-by-one and calculating the running total at that time. Lame. I would much rather use LINQ to SQL, or LINQ if not possible with LINQ to SQL, to figure out the running totals so I can just set DataGridView.DataSource to my data.

This is a super-simplified example of what I'm shooting for. Say I have the following class.

class Item
{
    public DateTime Date { get; set; }
    public decimal Amount { get; set; }
    public decimal RunningTotal { get; set; }
}

I would like a L2S, or LINQ, statement that could generate results that look like this:

   Date       Amount  RunningTotal
12-01-2009      5          5
12-02-2009     -5          0
12-02-2009     10         10
12-03-2009      5         15
12-04-2009    -15          0

Notice that there can be multiple items with the same date (12-02-2009). The results should be sorted by date before the running totals are calculated. I'm guessing this means I'll need two statements, one to get the data and sort it and a second to perform the running total calculation.

I was hoping Aggregate would do the trick, but it doesn't work like I was hoping. Or maybe I just couldn't figure it out.

This question seemed to be going after the same thing I wanted, but I don't see how the accepted/only answer solves my problem.

Any ideas on how to pull this off?

Edit Combing the answers from Alex and DOK, this is what I ended up with:

decimal runningTotal = 0;
var results = FetchDataFromDatabase()
    .OrderBy(item => item.Date)
    .Select(item => new Item
    {
        Amount = item.Amount,
        Date = item.Date,
        RunningTotal = runningTotal += item.Amount
    });
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3 Answers

up vote 19 down vote accepted

Using closures and anonymous method:

List<Item> myList = FetchDataFromDatabase();

decimal currentTotal = 0;
var query = myList
               .OrderBy(i => i.Date)
               .Select(i => 
                           {
                             currentTotal += i.Amount;
                             return new { 
                                            Date = i.Date, 
                                            Amount = i.Amount, 
                                            RunningTotal = currentTotal 
                                        };
                           }
                      );
foreach (var item in query)
{
    //do with item
}
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1  
I wish I could mark you both as the answer! Your answer was easy to understand and matches my example. I do like how DOK increments the currentTotal inline, during the assignment, though. – Ecyrb Dec 2 '09 at 19:16
+1 SOF should have options for marking multiple answers. – Angkor Wat Aug 19 '10 at 10:11
I've tried this with Linq to Entities (EF) and get a "A lambda expression with a statement body cannot be converted to an expression tree" compile error. Is that particular to EF as opposed to L2O? – Neil Barnwell Feb 18 '11 at 14:40

How about this: (credit goes to this source)

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
    class Program
    {
        delegate string CreateGroupingDelegate(int i);

        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            List<int> list = new List<int>() { 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12, 13, 69, 2007};
            int running_total = 0;

            var result_set =
                from x in list
                select new
                {
                    num = x,
                    running_total = (running_total = running_total + x)
                };

            foreach (var v in result_set)
            {
                Console.WriteLine( "list element: {0}, total so far: {1}",
                    v.num,
                    v.running_total);
            }

            Console.ReadLine();
        }
    }
}
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Thanks! I like how you assign running_total inline. That's pretty slick. – Ecyrb Dec 2 '09 at 19:17
2  
running_total = (running_total = running_total + x) => Mind blown. I will surely remember this for the next time :) – Alex Bagnolini Dec 2 '09 at 21:52

Aggregate can be used to obtain a running total as well:

var src = new [] { 1, 4, 3, 2 };
var running = src.Aggregate(new List<int>(), (a, i) => {
    a.Add(a.Count == 0 ? i : a.Last() + i);
    return a;
});
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