3

I'm attempting to create a small "automapper-esq" utility that will take a LinqToSql entity and map it to a "projection class".

So far I have something like this:

class Entity
{
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string WantedProperty { get; set; }
    public string UnWantedPropertyData { get; set; }
    ...More Unwanted Properties...
    public IEnumerable<ChildEntity> ChildEntities { get; set; }
}

class EntityProjection
{
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string WantedProperty { get; set; }
    public IEnumerable<ChildEntityProjection> ChildEntities { get; set; }
}

class ChildEntityProjection
{
    public int ID { get; set; }
    public string WantedProperty { get; set; }
    public string UnWantedPropertyData { get; set; }
    ...More Unwanted Properties...
}


var results = context.Table.Select(ProjectionHelper.BuildProjection<Entity,EntityProjection>());

where BuildProjection returns:

Expression<Func<TSource, TResult>>

which essentially creates a lambda like this:

A => new EntityProjection() { ID = A.ID, WantedProperty = A.WantedProperty }

Now the tricky part...I'd like to be able to project association properties of the "parent" entity as well. Essentially what I need is to get something like this:

A => new EntityProjection() {
  ID = A.ID,
  WantedProperty = A.WantedProperty,
  ChildEntities = A.ChildEntities.Select(B => new ChildEntityProjection {
    ID = B.ID,
    WantedProperty = B.WantedProperty
  }
}

I have gotten as far as getting this part:

A => new EntityProjection() {
  ID = A.ID,
  WantedProperty = A.WantedProperty,
  ChildEntities = System.Collections.Generic.List1[ChildEntity].Select(B => new ChildEntityProjection {
    ID = B.ID,
    WantedProperty = B.WantedProperty
  }
}

By doing this:

IQueryable<ChildEntity> list = new List<ChildEtity>().AsQueryable();
Expression _selectExpression = Expression.Call(
  typeof(Queryable),
  "Select",
  new Type[] { typeof(ChildEntity), typeof(ChildEntityProjection) },
  Expression.Constant(list),
  _nestedLambda);

Here is where I am stuck at the moment...I am getting a little confused when attempting to replace Expression.Constant(list) with some other expression that represents the actual datatype for the property so that "System.Collections.Generic.List1[ChildEntity].Select(B=>..." will be replaced with "A.ChildEntities.Select(B=>..."

Any ideas?

2 Answers 2

7

I was looking more for how to do this using Expressions (correct terminology?) and I did eventually figure it out.

I had to change this:

IQueryable<ChildEntity> list = new List<ChildEtity>().AsQueryable(); 
Expression _selectExpression = Expression.Call( 
  typeof(Queryable), 
  "Select", 
  new Type[] { typeof(ChildEntity), typeof(ChildEntityProjection) }, 
  Expression.Constant(list), 
  _nestedLambda); 

to this:

MethodInfo selectMethod = null;
foreach (MethodInfo m in typeof(Enumerable).GetMethods().Where(m => m.Name == "Select"))
  foreach (ParameterInfo p in m.GetParameters().Where(p => p.Name.Equals("selector")))
    if (p.ParameterType.GetGenericArguments().Count() == 2)
      selectMethod = (MethodInfo)p.Member;

var _selectExpression = Expression.Call(
  null,
  selectMethod.MakeGenericMethod(new Type[] { typeof(ChildEntity), typeof(ChildEntityProjection) }),
  new Expression[] { _myPropertyExpression, _myFuncExpression });

Hope this helps someone else out...

0

Here's a suggested query. And you might want to change your IEnumerable<> in EntityProjection to a List<> to avoid a lazy load (if it matters...). Anyway, I hope this is helpful.

EntityProjection projection = context.Table
    .Where(entity => entity.ID == 123)
    .Select(entity => new EntityProjection()
    {
        ID = entity.ID,
        WantedProperty = entity.WantedProperty,
        ChildEntities = entity.ChildEntities
            .Select(child => new ChildEntityProjection()
            {
                ID = child.EmployeeID,
                WantedProperty = child.WantedProperty
            })
            .ToList()
    })
    .SingleOrDefault();

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.