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I've got a relatively simple question about asp.net MVC models.

I've got a model based on two tables that are linked in a one-to-many relationship.

table AnimalGroup(ID,name)

table AnimalSubGroup(ID,name,AnimalGroupID)

Each AnimalGroup has any number of AnimalSubgroups.

How do I iterate through each AnimalGroup's AnimalSubGroups and get AnimalSubGroup.name (for example)? I'm new to asp.net MVC and have been following various tutorials, but while they're excellent for getting a basic application set up and getting results out of a single table, I'm stuck as to how I'd get results from several tables linked in the same model. I've seen references to ViewModel as a solution, but it seems that ViewModel is more useful for putting data from two unrelated tables into a single View.

Thanks in advance.

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  • What do you use to acces your DB? Linq to SQL? Mar 2, 2010 at 1:17
  • I'm not sure - I'm using Visual Studio with the MVC plugin, and I'm basically just following the wizard to create a model that contains DB tables.
    – sslepian
    Mar 2, 2010 at 1:20
  • I see. Well, the thing is ASP.NET MVC is just a framework to develop web applications. So without knowing what you use for geting your entities and returning them to your views, answering your question is a bit difficult. It would help if you could provide some more details in the question. Mar 2, 2010 at 1:23
  • If it helps, I was basically following this tutorial: stephenwalther.com/blog/archive/2009/02/07/… Edit: Oh, I see what you mean. I'm not using LINQ, it looks like I'm using ADO.NET Entity database (.edmx) to represent/access my tables
    – sslepian
    Mar 2, 2010 at 1:28
  • OK. I edited the question to add the entity-framework and ado.net-entity-data-model tags. Mar 2, 2010 at 1:34

2 Answers 2

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First. Do you have foreign keys defined in your database? If yes, edmx model generator will define all conections. If not, do it right now. When it is done, you can select subgroup name by:

  1. Taking it directly from context:

    context.AnimalSubGroupSet.Where(sg => sg.AnimalGroupID = requestedAnimalGroupID).Select(sg => sg.Name).ToList;

  2. Taking it from AnimalGroup:

    animalGroup.AnimalSubGroups.Select(sg => sg.Name);

This code may need adjustments, but they shouldn't be complicated.

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  • Neither of those seems to work: context doesn't even exist, and the second one works but returns an empty list (and my database is not empty). I'm defining private AnimalGroupEntities _animalGroupDataModel = new AnimalGroupEntities(), then passing it to the view as return View(_animalGroupDataModel.AnimalGroup.ToList()); In the view, I have var groups = item.AnimalGroupSubcategory.Select(sg => sg.name); and then I iterate over the entries of groups, which is where things break down. I apologize for the messiness of the comment - is there a way to add line breaks?
    – sslepian
    Mar 2, 2010 at 20:04
  • @sslepian: If you want to use the second, you have to call animalGroup.AnimalSubGroups.Load() first. And for the first context = _animalGroupDataModel.
    – LukLed
    Mar 2, 2010 at 20:19
  • Oh wow, that solved it. Thanks so much! On a related note, is there a good tutorial for the ado.net entity framework that you'd recommend? None of the ones I found covered this, and a lot of them use LINQ which isn't really useful to me.
    – sslepian
    Mar 2, 2010 at 20:46
  • @sslepian: I would strongly suggest you to buy a book: stackoverflow.com/questions/258840/…
    – LukLed
    Mar 2, 2010 at 20:50
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Perhaps you should take a look at LINQ's SelectMany query operator. This sub-iterates over one-to-many data table relationships. Note that you can chain SelectMany calls:

var mymanyselections = datacontext.parenttable.SelectMany(l=>l.Name).SelectMany(m=>m.Name);

This assumes that you have foreign key relationships in your data tables.

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