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Can you tell me how to select multiple rows with many different id in a table and store it into ViewBag?

This line can get all rows with the id is "123": ViewBag.Name = (from m in myDatabase.myTable where m.id == "123" select m).ToList();

Calling it in View:

<tr>
foreach(var item in ViewBag.Name)
{
   <td>@item.ProductName</td>
   <td>@item.Category</td>
}
</tr>

Now. I have a list to store the values of the id. Like this:

List<string> list = new List<string>();
list.Add("123");
list.Add("456");
list.Add("789");
//.....

And an un-complete loop:

foreach(var item in list)
{
   // ViewBag.Name = from m in myDatabase.myTable where ..........
}

Please help!

5
  • First, don't use ViewBag. Jun 4, 2015 at 9:09
  • Try from m in myDatabase.myTable where list.Contains(m.id) select m. Jun 4, 2015 at 9:10
  • 1
    This is so wrong on so many levels. Basically i think you want something like ViewBag.Names = (from m in myDatabase.myTable where m.id == "123" || m.id == "456" || m.id == "789" select m.Name).ToList(); Jun 4, 2015 at 9:11
  • And how can you keep a list of entities in a Name var ? Wow... wait.. WHAT? Jun 4, 2015 at 9:13
  • Complaining about variable names in samples then providing an example with an obviously variable list hardcoded... wow...wait...what?
    – freedomn-m
    Jun 4, 2015 at 9:20

2 Answers 2

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Replace List with HashSet (small optimization):

HashSet<string> list = new HashSet<string>();
list.Add("123");
list.Add("456");
list.Add("789");
// ...

Query:

ViewBag.Name = (from m in myDatabase.myTable
                where list.Contains(m.id)
                select m).ToList();

Add model to view, and put result in model, not in ViewBag.

0

ViewBag.Name is a dynamic type which is getting assigned to List<myTable>

You can use FirstOrDefault to find the item in the existing list.

foreach(var item in list)
{
    var name = ViewBag.Name.FirstOrDefault(x=>x.ID == item);
    if (name != null) 
    {
       <td>@name.ProductName</td>
       <td>@name.Category</td> 
    }
}

Couple of points:

  • ViewBag.Name would be better named for what it is, eg ViewBag.MyTableList or even just plural ViewBag.Names
  • you might find model binding easier if you use a strongly defined viewmodel, rather than ViewBag
  • depending on how many rows there are, you could make this more efficient

It's hard to tell where ViewBag.Name and list are being set. If these are both in the codebehind, then you could filter the data selection rather than filter on the UI - this would be more efficient.

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