I using Dynamic Linq to do some database queries and it's working really well up to now. I can pass a string to a Select
to select fields like so:
var output = myDatabaseTable.Select("Foo, Bar");
For example. The power obviously being when you pass a string variable rather than hardcoded strings. The problem I'm running into now is that the library using IEnumerable
instead of IEnumerable<T>
because, obviously, it can't know T
until runtime. I'm using this to select data and eventually return it to a client and it works fine for spitting out raw data, but now I want to be able to do some more processing before returning the data and that requires getting the query to run on the database first. I can do something like this:
var materializedResults = output.Cast<dynamic>().ToList();
And that will make the query run. But the problem is, once I've done that, it seems I can't use dynamic linq anymore. For example, if I did something like this:
var foos = materializedResults.Select("Foo");
I now get a System.Linq.Dynamic.ParseException
with the message No property of field 'Foo' exists in type 'Object'
(Note: I can see in the debugger that the materializedResults
does actually have all the expected properties).
So after casting to a List
so I can potentially iterate through it and modify some of the values, I can no longer query it.
So my question is, how can I take a dynamic query (with select, group by, order by etc provided as strings), materialize the results and then actually process those result dynamically?
I thought maybe if I could cast to the actual type rather than dynamic
it might work, so I tried this:
var d = output.Cast<dynamic>().ToList();
MethodInfo method = typeof(Enumerable).GetMethod("Cast", new[] {typeof(IEnumerable)});
method = method.MakeGenericMethod(d.First().GetType());
output = method.Invoke(d, new[] {d}) as IEnumerable;
Which is ugly and requires me to cast twice. The first time to dynamic
so I can get the type from the first item then again to that type.
DataTable
? The whole benefit of LINQ (strongly typed translations from C# to some query provider) is completely eliminated this way, doubly so if you have to throw in reflection like this.