6

I have a Linq to sql as following:

var members=db.Members.Include(x=> x.Contact).Count();

Now due to some bad data all contacts in my members don't have corresponding Contact record. So during the count how can i include the Count after Inner Join with the Contact table.

The problem is when i get the list of members, the list of members has 100 Records while Count has 150 records (50 records being bad data).

var membersQ=db.Members.Include(x=> x.Contact).Select(i=> new MemberViewModel(){
 Name = i.Contact.Name,
 ContactId= i.Contact.Id,
 CreatedDate= i.CreatedDate
}).AsQueryable();
var members=memberQ.ToList();// =100,paging is done...
// the memebers list uses paging but the count doesn't
var total=membersQ.Count(); // =150

I checked the Resulting Query during count, apparently it doesn't do JOIN with Contact table while Count()

Update Database structure

Member Table
Id   ContactId, CompanyId, CreatedDate ...

Contact Table
Id   Name ...

The foreign key for ContactId in Member table is not set in database level but on the Model only.

[ForeignKey("ContactId")]
Public Contact Contact { get; set; }

The bad data goes like this

I had previously 1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10 as Contact records and all those contacts were in Member table too.

Now I deleted records from Contact table lets say 6-10. But happened not to delete from Member table.

So this is causing an issue with the count. Yah sure, deleting the bad data from Member solves the issue but the question is how to use join while using Count().

Note: I use database initializer null

Update 2 I used LinqPad and Tried both default Linq To SQL and EntityFramework (DbContext) connection and what i found is confusing.

For Query:

(from a in Members
join b in Contacts on a.ContactId equals b.ContactId
select a).Count()

Using Default Linq To SQL

SELECT COUNT(*) AS [value]
FROM [Member] AS [t0]
INNER JOIN [Contact] AS [t1] ON [t0].[ContactID] = [t1].[ContactID]

Using Entityframework DbContext

SELECT 
    [GroupBy1].[A1] AS [C1]
    FROM ( SELECT 
        COUNT(1) AS [A1]
        FROM [dbo].[Member] AS [Extent1]
    )  AS [GroupBy1]

In my code i use the DbContext method. So.. don't know what to do here . btw: Sorry for having a tag with linq-to-sql it is actually entityframework

2
  • just for fun. try. memberQ.Contacts.Count() (that should be 100) Feb 25, 2016 at 9:56
  • So I will have to use different Query that select Contact, than the one used for ToList?
    – Ruchan
    Feb 25, 2016 at 10:16

5 Answers 5

4
+25

What about this:

var x = from m in Members 
        join c in Contacts on  m.ContactId equals c.ID
        select new 
        {
            Name = c.Name,
            ContactId= c.ID,
            CreatedDate= c.CreatedDate
        };

Console.Write(x.Count());

EDIT

When I use LinqPad with this query and look at generated SQL I get:

SELECT COUNT(*) AS [value]
FROM [Members] AS [t0]
INNER JOIN [Contact] AS [t1] ON [t0].[ContactId] = ([t1].[ID])

EDIT 2

You could also try this:

var x = from c in Contacts
        from m in Members where m.ContactId == c.ID
        select new 
        {
            Name = c.Name,
            ContactId= c.ID,
            CreatedDate= c.CreatedDate
        };

Console.Write(x.Count());
4
  • Actually this also doesn't work, the resulting query doesn't do join with Contact
    – Ruchan
    Feb 28, 2016 at 7:47
  • @Ruchan when I use LinqPAd and run the query I get an Inner Join: SELECT COUNT(*) AS [value] FROM [Members] AS [t0] INNER JOIN [Contact] AS [t1] ON [t0].[ContactId] = ([t1].[ID])
    – Steve Ford
    Mar 2, 2016 at 13:10
  • @Ruchan added another method, let me know how you get on
    – Steve Ford
    Mar 9, 2016 at 14:50
  • it still returns the same query i mentioned for DbContext method.
    – Ruchan
    Mar 10, 2016 at 5:32
2

Not sure if this is right but, are the records containing bad data, duplicates? If yes, then why not use distinct() to only get those 100 good records? If all you want is just the count from the list, then why not use:

var members = memberQ.ToList();
int total = members.Count; 
1
  • For the sake of example i used ToList directly, but i need to do paging in the records. The count is not required to have paging.
    – Ruchan
    Feb 23, 2016 at 8:09
2

The answer to this is simply you have no connection between Members and Contact. The Members table has 150 rows and the Contact table has 100 rows. So when you try to fetch you actually pair the data row by row until some table is finished. When you count you count the first table.

Solution You need to add a FK to Contacts from Members or any type of identifier you can "bind" the data to on Members from Contact.

More explanation & even more in comments

In the table Members you have a reference to a Contact. which you populate with your Include(x=> x.Contact) statement

So when you try to make this

new MemberViewModel(){
    Name = i.Contact.Name,
    ContactId= i.Contact.Id,
    CreatedDate= i.CreatedDate
}

You are asking for content of a Contact (as you probably know.)

Now for some explanation. When you query the database as you do into the MembersQ you are not fetching/realizing the data. (you are just preparing a query)

To realize a query you must call ToArray(), ToList() etc. And when you do a foreach on the data you realize one row at a time (cursor).

Now for your result, when you call ToList() you are realizing the list of type List (now only elements able to fill are used (this is your 100))

When you are performing memberQ.Count() you ask for a count of the query from the database, as the database knows nothing about the MemberViewModel it will return the counts of Members matching a possible Where(x=>{filter}) (this is your 150)

A simple fix is to write ToList() instead of AsQueryable(). Im alittle rusty on LINQ-to-SQL you might have to do AsQueryable().ToList()

A possible solution is to filter beforehand.

var membersQ=db.Members.Include(x=> x.Contact).Where(a=> a.Contact != null).Select(i=> new MemberViewModel(){
    Name = i.Contact.Name,
    ContactId= i.Contact.Id,
    CreatedDate= i.CreatedDate
}).AsQueryable();

now membersQ.Count() should be equal to var membersQ.ToList().Count()

And to perform paging use memberQ.Skip(x).Take(y) this will be performed on the SQL and not on the webserver. Unless you ToList() then everything is on server as its suddenly a set of data in server memory.

If that dont work, then you dont have a foreigh key present, you could just change the filter to filter in ContactID instead of Contact. of add a FK (Foreign Key)

Add foreign Key: If you have access to modify your SQL then make the ContactID in Members nullable and add a foreign key to from the members ContactID and Contact's ID.

Then delete the two tables from your dbml and drag them in again from the db explorer. Now you should be able to simply use the code without includes as is will be "Lazy loaded" (meaning no includes) versus Eager loaded (meaning you have to say what to load)

11
  • Yeah, the ToList does solve the problem, but creates another problem. Too much data The ToList will list all the records from the database, which when used paging doesn't require. Yeah i have not put an example of paging, but i have cited in the post that there will be paging. The count is the Total count of Records in database without paging.
    – Ruchan
    Feb 26, 2016 at 7:45
  • Added a example at the bottom, see if that dont help Feb 26, 2016 at 7:56
  • I have used the a.Contact != null and it still doesn't work. The resulting query doesn't have join or check for existing Contact on Count()
    – Ruchan
    Feb 28, 2016 at 7:46
  • Ohh. hmm that looks to mean that you don't actually have a Foreign Key present. Feb 28, 2016 at 11:45
  • another thing, make the Where on the a.ContactID != null instead of a.Contact != null since you dont have access to the Contact object in the query yet. (added more stuff to the end of the answer. Feb 28, 2016 at 11:50
1

try this

var members=db.Members.Include(x=> x.Contact)
                      .Where(x => x.Contact != null)
                      .Count();
0
var members = db.Contracts.Where(w=> w.Member != null).Select(i=> new MemberViewModel(){
 Name = i.Contact.Name,
 ContactId= i.Contact.Id,
 CreatedDate= i.CreatedDate
}).AsQueryable());

Is this somewhat what you're after?

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