2
var list = ProcessedInformationTable.AsEnumerable().ToList();
                        var minValue = list.Min(v => v["Rank"]);
                        var maxValue = list.Max(v => v["Rank"]);

In the code above if I had the values of

  • ColumnA|Rank
  • Heart|9
  • Lung|10
  • minValue will return as 10 and maxvalue will return as 9. My guess is because it's treated as a string even though every value is an int. Is there a way around this?

    2
    • Is Column data type int in the DataTable? Sep 13, 2013 at 20:22
    • @YuriyGalanter i dont specify the datatable type because it comes from a sql query
      – user222427
      Sep 13, 2013 at 20:24

    2 Answers 2

    3

    Don't create a List<T> from the DataTable, that just doubles the required memory without any benefit. Use Linq-To-DataSet which is a subset of Linq-To-Objects.

    Either the column is already of type int, then you have to cast it accodingly or it's actually string. Then you have to change that or use ìnt.Parse first:

    var rows = ProcessedInformationTable.AsEnumerable();
    int minValue = rows.Min(r => r.Field<int>("Rank"));
    int maxValue = rows.Max(r => r.Field<int>("Rank"));
    

    If it's string:

    int minValue = rows.Min(r => int.Parse(r.Field<string>("Rank")));
    int maxValue = rows.Max(r => int.Parse(r.Field<string>("Rank")));
    
    1
    • What is "equiwed" memory? If it's a typo, not sure what of.
      – Servy
      Sep 13, 2013 at 20:29
    0

    Provided that your Rank column is an integer and doesn't contain nulls:

    var list = ProcessedInformationTable.AsEnumerable().ToList();
    var minValue = list.Min(v => (int)v["Rank"]);
    var maxValue = list.Max(v => (int)v["Rank"]);
    

    v["Rank"] is most likely casting as a string using the built-in object.ToString() when evaluating.

    0

    Your Answer

    By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.