I have a collection of objects that each defined by a particular "group". How can I write a LINQ query to produce a count of each object grouped by "group".

As an example, lets say I have the following classes;

public class Release 
{
     int ReleaseNumber; 

     public ReleaseDetails[] details;

}

public class ReleaseDetails
{
    string Group;

    // other details omitted
}

For a given release, I'd like to be able to produce output like;

Release number 1 contains the following details;
 - 17 records in Group A
 - 12 records in Group B
 - 6 records in Group C

Any help is much appreciated.

link|improve this question

feedback

2 Answers

up vote 1 down vote accepted

You can do something like

var q = from d in r.Details
            group d by d.Group into counts
            select new { Count = counts.Count(), Group = counts.Key };

Full example:

        Release r = new Release
        {
            ReleaseNumber = 1
            ,
            Details = new ReleaseDetails[]
            {
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "a"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "a"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "b"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "c"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "d"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "d"},
                new ReleaseDetails { Group = "e"},

            }
        };

        var q = from d in r.Details
                group d by d.Group into counts
                select new { Count = counts.Count(), Group = counts.Key };

        foreach (var count in q)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Group {0}: {1}", count.Group, count.Count);
        }
link|improve this answer
Awesome. Just what I was after. Thanks mate. – Mr Moose Jul 12 '11 at 6:39
feedback

Here you go.

    public class ReleaseDetails
    {
        public string Group { get; set; }
        public ReleaseDetails() {}
        public ReleaseDetails(string grp){Group = grp;}
    }

            var qry = new Release();
            qry.details = new List<ReleaseDetails>();
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("A"));
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("A"));
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("B"));
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("C"));
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("C"));
            qry.details.Add(new ReleaseDetails("B"));


 var result = from x in qry.details
                group x by x.Group into g
                select new 
                { 
                    Count = g.Count(), 
                    Group = g.Key 
                };

//Or using Labmda
var result1 = qry.details.GroupBy(x => x.Group).Select(g => new { Count = g.Count(), Group = g.Key });
link|improve this answer
Hmmm, like faesters example, you actually need to provide the Group property within ReleaseDetails before you attempt to group by it in the linq query. Other than that, it looks like you came up with almost the exact same as faester. – Mr Moose Jul 12 '11 at 6:45
Sorry i did not copy the ReleaseDetails ctor where i assign Group.The code assumes it was included in "other details omitted". – Mangesh Pimpalkar Jul 12 '11 at 16:34
I edited the answer to include ctor and lambda way of doing grouping. – Mangesh Pimpalkar Jul 12 '11 at 17:04
Excellent. Thanks for the edit and alternative example using Lambda. I appreciate you taking the time to make the adjustments. +1 – Mr Moose Jul 13 '11 at 1:41
feedback

Your Answer

 
or
required, but never shown

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