10

I'm trying to execute a SQL query in EF 6. The select query returns two string columns, e.g. select 'a', 'b', and can have any number of rows.

I'd like to map the result to a dictionary, but I can't get ride of the following error.

Error 1 Cannot implicitly convert type 'System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure.DbRawSqlQuery>' to 'System.Collections.Generic.Dictionary'

This is the code:

using (var db = new EFDbContext())
{
    Dictionary<string, string> perms = new Dictionary<string, string>();
    perms = db.Database.SqlQuery<Dictionary<string, string>>(TheQuery);
}

I've tried various select and ToDictionary after the query, but none of them worked.

4 Answers 4

17

You can use SqlQuery to directly populate an object if the object has a default constructor and property setters. The result can then be used to create a dictionary. For example:

public class QueryResult
{
    public string A { get; set; }
    public string B { get; set; }
}
// the colulmn/alias names need to match property names
string query = "SELECT column1 AS [A], column2 AS [B] FROM ..."

using (var db = new EFDbContext())
{
    var perms = db.Database.SqlQuery<QueryResult>(query)
        .ToDictionary(r => r.A, r => r.B);
}
6
  • 3
    Can't I use SqlQuery<dictionary...>? It would be nice, if I could avoid the extra class.
    – Akbari
    Jun 11, 2015 at 4:54
  • 3
    Well, the return type for SqlQuery<T> is DbSqlQuery<T>, which is already a collection (or technically an IEnumerable<T>), and I don't think you'd want a collection of dictionaries. If you already have a existing class that fits the query, that would work too. Unfortunately Tuple and KeyValuePair don't work because they don't have default constructors.
    – jjj
    Jun 11, 2015 at 4:58
  • Personally, I don't think an additional class should be a problem though if you're going to use this data in multiple places, though.
    – jjj
    Jun 11, 2015 at 5:01
  • Thanks very much jjj. This is an extension method that will update some of the object's fields, fields' names and first column of the query are the same. But the fields are bool and based on the second column, I'll decide that each of them should be false, or true. Can I use the class itself to update the fields (without loosing other fields)?
    – Akbari
    Jun 11, 2015 at 5:02
  • Sorry, I'm not sure I understand what you're asking here. It sounds like you could use custom property getters that return a boolean based on the value of the second column?
    – jjj
    Jun 11, 2015 at 5:07
1

Are you trying to create a Dictionary with Key-Value pairings corresponding to the respective values in the two columns returned via your query?

If so you would be best served querying twice, and create two Lists of strings and creating a Dictionary using those.

List<string> keys = new List<string>();
List<string> values = new List<string>();

//Populate Lists with data from LINQ db call

Dictionary<string, string> dict = keys.ToDictionary(x => x, x => values[keys.IndexOf(x)]);

This requires that the Lists are of the same size and column you designate as keys holds unique values.

0
1

Improving the Jjj's answer with generics:

create a generic Dictionary query result:

public class DictionaryResult<K,V>
{
    public K Key { get; set; }
    public V Value { get; set; }
}

Usage:

const string query = "select id as Key, name as Value from anywhere";
var resultado = context.Database.SqlQuery<DictionaryResult<int, string>>(query);
1

I need to return a list of KeyValuePair from a parametered SQL call to Entity Framework. I built my code based on the previous posts. By having a generic dictionaryResult, you can reuse it to return a list of generic keyvaluePair from any query that has Key Value columns. Here it is if it's useful to anyone:

  1. a generic class:
    private class DictionaryResult<K, V>
        {
            public K Key { get; set; }
            public V Value { get; set; }
        }
  1. define your SQL:
private const string SQL = "select Acct_No as Key, XX as Value from XXXXX where acct_no in ( :accts)";
  1. use the generic class to return a list of keyvalueapair:
    public List<KeyValuePair<int, string>> GetXXX(string accts)
        {
            using (var securityEntities = ODPFactory.GetSecurityEntities(_ownerRef))
            {
                var returnValue = securityEntities.ExecuteStoreQuery<DictionaryResult<int, string>>(SQL, new object[] { accts })
                    .Select(item => new KeyValuePair<int, string>(item.Key, item.Value))
                    .ToList();
                return returnValue;
            }
        }

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