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I am using Linq to SQL to call a stored procedure which runs a full-text search and returns the rank plus a few specific columns from the table Article. The rank column is the rank returned from the SQL function FREETEXTTABLE(). I've added this sproc to the O/R designer with return type Article.

This is working to get the columns I need; however, it discards the ranking of each search result. I'd like to get this information so I can display it to the user.

So far, I've tried creating a new class RankedArticle which inherits from Article and adds the column Rank, then changing the return type of my sproc mapping to RankedArticle. When I try this, an InvalidOperationException gets thrown:

Data member 'Int32 ArticleID' of type 'Heap.Models.Article' is not part of the mapping for type 'RankedArticle'. Is the member above the root of an inheritance hierarchy?

If I let the O/R designer set the sproc's own return type, it returns an int rather than a "SearchArticlesByKeywordResult" object. I'm not sure why this is, perhaps because the sproc is returning a union? Here is my procedure:

BEGIN
SET NOCOUNT ON;
(
    SELECT ftt.[rank] as [Rank], ArticleID, Subject
    FROM Article
    INNER JOIN FREETEXTTABLE( Article, (Subject, Body), @KeywordList ) AS ftt
    ON ftt.[key] = Article.ArticleID

    UNION

    SELECT ftt.[rank] as [Rank], Article.ArticleID as ArticleID, Article.Subject as Subject
    FROM Article
    INNER JOIN Solution ON Solution.ArticleID = Article.ArticleID
    INNER JOIN FREETEXTTABLE( Solution, Body, @KeywordList ) AS ftt
    ON ftt.[key] = Solution.SolutionID
)
ORDER BY [Rank] DESC
END

I can't seem to find any other questions or Google results from people trying to get the rank column, so I'm probably missing something obvious here.

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  • When you add a sproc to the linq to sql designer, it creates its own return type. Why are you mapping it to Article?
    – Raj Kaimal
    May 9, 2010 at 4:49
  • .. it creates its own return type which should have the rank as a property.
    – Raj Kaimal
    May 9, 2010 at 5:21
  • Forgot to mention, I tried that when I just drag the sproc into the O/R designer, it makes it return an int rather than a SearchArticlesByKeywordResult object. I've edited the question too. May 9, 2010 at 16:13
  • Go to sql management studio and call your stored procedure with a @keywordlist as null. Do you see any error? Linq to SQL, in addition to other things, calls the sproc with null to discover the return columns.
    – Raj Kaimal
    May 9, 2010 at 16:28
  • You're right; I was not aware that's how it worked. I modified my sproc to not error on a null input parameter and now it generated a result type. That result type has exactly what I needed. If you post your help as an answer I'll accept it. Thanks! May 9, 2010 at 19:25

1 Answer 1

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Go to sql management studio and call your stored procedure with a @keywordlist as null. Do you see any error? Linq to SQL, in addition to other things, calls the sproc with null to discover the return columns.

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  • The sproc was erroring on a null input, I hadn't considered that. I made it return the normal result list on null input, and now an auto-generated result type gets generated when I add the sproc to the O/R designer. Thanks! May 12, 2010 at 18:06

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