2

This is a strange problem I'm having, I have the following statement:

IEnumerable<CategoryListViewModel> categoryViewModels = categoryRepository.GetAllCategoryViewModels();

This correctly populates with exactly one element.

categoryViewModels.Where(cvm => cvm.CategoryId == localId).Single().Selected = true;

Yet, nothing gets updated, selected remains false. I can verify that the CategoryId and the localId are equal, if I break out:

var something = categoryViewModels.Where(cvm => cvm.CategoryId == localId).Single()

It correctly returns the one viewModel. In fact, if I go in and I set the local variable "something" to Selected = false. It'll correctly update the local variable.

Am I missing something obvious?

Edit:

public class CategoryListViewModel
{
    public Guid CategoryId { get; set; }

    public string CategoryName { get; set; }

    public bool Selected { get; set; }
}
7
  • Can we see definition of CategoryViewModel? Jul 22, 2011 at 18:37
  • 1
    Sorry, but your code above mentions CategoryViewModel, but your example says CategoryListViewModel... typo? Jul 22, 2011 at 18:42
  • If CategoryViewModel is a value type, this could be an issue...
    – Tigran
    Jul 22, 2011 at 18:45
  • @Tigran: actually if it's a value type it won't compile... I already played with that to see :-) Jul 22, 2011 at 18:46
  • at this point, may he just confused collections? :) Hard and late evening at office, it happens...
    – Tigran
    Jul 22, 2011 at 18:48

2 Answers 2

2

I think your problem might be that categoryViewModels is actually an IQueryable - so when you enumerate it, then it makes a database call and SELECTs a list from the database.

This means you create a list, and then change selected for one item in that list.

However... next time you enumerate categoryViewModels then this causes another SELECT to occur - and a new list to be fetched into memory.

To fix this, you could try ToList():

IEnumerable<CategoryViewModel> categoryViewModels = categoryRepository.GetAllCategoryViewModels().ToList();

or you could reorganise your code in some other way to ensure only one underlying query is performed.

2
  • 2
    That is an interesting point! I was taking the IEnumerable at face value. Jul 22, 2011 at 18:45
  • I think this is the problem... I read the question and was about to post a "are you sure?" message - then I noticed the categoryRepository name :)
    – Stuart
    Jul 22, 2011 at 18:47
0

This is odd, I have the following bit of code and it works for me:

public static void Main()
{
    var guid = Guid.NewGuid();
    List<CategoryListViewModel> list = new List<CategoryListViewModel>
                                        {
                                            new CategoryListViewModel
                                                { CategoryId = guid, CategoryName = "Hi", Selected = false }
                                        };

    list.Where(cvm => cvm.CategoryId == guid).Single().Selected = true;

    Console.WriteLine(list[0].Selected);
}

public class CategoryListViewModel
{
    public Guid CategoryId { get; set; }

    public string CategoryName { get; set; }

    public bool Selected { get; set; }
}

I can't recreate your issue, it shows true for me once I perform the LINQ. Can you post your whole code, maybe there's a side-effect we don't see in the snippet...

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