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1

Hey all.

I got one big question.

I got a linq query to put it simply looks like this:

from xx in table
where xx.uid.ToString().Contains(string[])
select xx

The values of the string[] array would be numbers like (1,45,20,10,etc...)

the Default for .Contains is .Contains(string).

I need it to do this instead: .Contains(string[])...

Edit: One user suggested writing an extension class for string[]. I would like to learn how, but any one willing to point me in the right direction?

Edit: The uid would also be a number. Thats why it is converted to a string.

Help anyone?

flag

You need to clarify would a uid might look like, and what would be considered a match. – James Curran Oct 12 '08 at 3:01
An example would be nice. It sounds to me like the question is asking for a UID like: CA1FAB689C33 and the array like: { "42", "2259", "CA" } – Thomas Bratt Oct 12 '08 at 9:38

9 Answers

vote up 5 vote down check

spoulson has it nearly right, but you need to create a List<string> from string[] first. Actually a List<int> would be better if uid is also int. List<T> supports Contains(). Doing uid.ToString().Contains( string[] ) would imply that the uid as a string contains all of the values of the array as a substring??? Even if you did write the extension method the sense of it would be wrong.

[EDIT]

Unless you changed it around and wrote it for string[] as Mitch Wheat demonstrates, then you'd just be able to skip the conversion step.

[ENDEDIT]

Here is what you want, if you don't do the extension method (unless you already have the collection of potential uids as ints -- then just use List<int>() instead).

List<string> uids = new List<string>( arrayofuids );

from xx in table
where uids.Contains( xx.uid.ToString() )
select xx
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Thank you. It was the right answer... One more thought? Lets say the arrayuids is also a linq query. Any way you could get both statements down to just one query from the database? – Scott Oct 12 '08 at 21:07
According to MSDN, string[] implements IEnumerable<T>, which has a Contains method. Therefore, it's not necessary to convert the array to an IList<T>. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – spoulson Oct 13 '08 at 1:11
See code example: rafb.net/p/AMsTaB42.html – spoulson Oct 13 '08 at 1:40
Correction, here's the code link: pastebin.com/f30868a36 – spoulson Oct 14 '08 at 19:43
vote up 1 vote down

How about:

from xx in table
where stringarray.Contains(xx.uid.ToString())
select xx
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NotSupportedException: Comparison operators not supported for type 'System.String[]' Thanks but try again? – Scott Oct 12 '08 at 1:31
This works ok for me. See this code example: rafb.net/p/AMsTaB42.html – spoulson Oct 13 '08 at 1:39
+1, if this is actually what they want. It's not very clear from the question. – Lucas Oct 14 '08 at 18:24
Correction, here's the code link: pastebin.com/f30868a36 – spoulson Oct 14 '08 at 19:43
vote up 2 vote down

This is an example of one way of writing an extension method (note: I wouldn't use this for very large arrays; another data structure would be more appropriate...):

namespace StringExtensionMethods
{
    public static class StringExtension
    {
        public static bool Contains(this string[] stringarray, string pat)
        {
            bool result = false;

            foreach (string s in stringarray)
            {
                if (s == pat)
                {
                    result = true;
                    break;
                }
            }

            return result;
        }
    }
}
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1  
that would be identical to public static bool Contains(this string[] stringarray, string pat) { return Array.IndexOf(stringarray, pat) != -1; } – James Curran Oct 12 '08 at 2:52
2  
string[] implements IEnumerable<string>, so it already has a Contains(string) extension method. Why are we reimplementing this? – Lucas Oct 13 '08 at 22:50
vote up 1 vote down

I believe you could also do something like this.

from xx in table
where (from yy in string[] 
       select yy).Contains(xx.uid.ToString())
select xx
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Same as "where stringArray.Contains(xx.uid.ToString())", no need to wrap it around in a query – Lucas Oct 13 '08 at 22:51
vote up -1 vote down

Try the following.


            string input = "someString";
            string[] toSearchFor = GetSearchStrings();
            var containsAll = toSearchFor.All(x => input.Contains(x));
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I really wish people would leave a comment when they mark you down. Especially since the answer I provided is 100% correct. – JaredPar Oct 13 '08 at 4:47
It wasn't me, but doesn't All() return simply a bool indicating where all items match the condition? And initializing toSearchFor to null guarantess a NullReferenceException. – Lucas Oct 13 '08 at 22:46
I editted the null issue to be what I intended to type. Yes on All. This effectively ensures that all strings in toSearchFor are contained within the input string. – JaredPar Oct 15 '08 at 8:33
vote up 1 vote down

If you are truly looking to replicate Contains, but for an array, here is an extension method and sample code for usage:

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

namespace ContainsAnyThingy
{
    class Program
    {
        static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            string testValue = "123345789";

            //will print true
            Console.WriteLine(testValue.ContainsAny("123", "987", "554")); 

            //but so will this also print true
            Console.WriteLine(testValue.ContainsAny("1", "987", "554"));
            Console.ReadKey();

        }
    }

    public static class StringExtensions
    {
        public static bool ContainsAny(this string str, params string[] values)
        {
            if (!string.IsNullOrEmpty(str) || values.Length == 0)
            {
                foreach (string value in values)
                {
                    if(str.Contains(value))
                        return true;
                }
            }

            return false;
        }
    }
}
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+1 @Jason, you should totally submit this to ExtensionMethod.net Thanks for the great code, it solved my problem today! – pcampbell Nov 19 at 18:33
vote up 0 vote down

So am I assuming correctly that uid is a Unique Identifier (Guid)? Is this just an example of a possible scenario or are you really trying to find a guid that matches an array of strings?

If this is true you may want to really rethink this whole approach, this seems like a really bad idea. You should probably be trying to match a Guid to a Guid

Guid id = new Guid(uid);
var query = from xx in table
            where xx.uid == id
            select xx;

I honestly can't imagine a scenario where matching a string array using "contains" to the contents of a Guid would be a good idea. For one thing, Contains() will not guarantee the order of numbers in the Guid so you could potentially match multiple items. Not to mention comparing guids this way would be way slower than just doing it directly.

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vote up 0 vote down

You should write it the other way around, checking your priviliged user id list contains the id on that row of table:

string[] search = new string[] { "2", "3" };
var result = from x in xx where search.Contains(x.uid.ToString()) select x;

LINQ behaves quite bright here and converts it to a good SQL statement:

sp_executesql N'SELECT [t0].[uid]
FROM [dbo].[xx] AS [t0]
WHERE (CONVERT(NVarChar,[t0].[uid]))
IN (@p0, @p1)',N'@p0 nvarchar(1),
@p1 nvarchar(1)',@p0=N'2',@p1=N'3'

which basicly embeds the contents of the 'search' array into the sql query, and does the filtering with 'IN' keyword in SQL.

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vote up 0 vote down

I managed to find a solution, but not a great one as it requires using AsEnumerable() which is going to return all results from the DB, fortunately I only have 1k records in the table so it isn't really noticable, but here goes.

var users = from u in (from u in ctx.Users
                       where u.Mod_Status != "D"
                       select u).AsEnumerable()
            where ar.All(n => u.FullName.IndexOf(n,
                        StringComparison.InvariantCultureIgnoreCase) >= 0)
            select u;


My original post follows:

How do you do the reverse? I want to do something like the following in entity framework.

string[] search = new string[] { "John", "Doe" };
var users = from u in ctx.Users
            from s in search
           where u.FullName.Contains(s)
          select u;

What I want is to find all users where their FullName contains all of the elements in `search'. I've tried a number of different ways, all of which haven't been working for me.

I've also tried

var users = from u in ctx.Users select u;
foreach (string s in search) {
    users = users.Where(u => u.FullName.Contains(s));
}

This version only finds those that contain the last element in the search array.

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