1

I have a very large XML document that has some missing nodes.

Good XML:

<wd:Job_Family wd:Descriptor="Research/Extension">
<wd:Home_Phone wd:Descriptor="+1 (555) 555-0731">
  <wd:ID wd:type="WID">89bfac800b6b41da94e1d1a22b14e66a</wd:ID>
</wd:Home_Phone>
<wd:Home_Address wd:Descriptor="1 Beverly Dr">

Bad XML:

 <wd:Job_Family wd:Descriptor="Research/Extension">
     ***MISSING ***
<wd:Home_Address wd:Descriptor="1 Beverly Dr">

The way I had been selecting the data was like this:

List<Employee> employee = new List<Employee>();
try
{
    // Get the xml file as stream  
    StreamReader reader = new StreamReader(outputFileNameAndPath);

    // Read the whole contents and return as a string  
    string xmlString = reader.ReadToEnd();

    XDocument doc = XDocument.Parse(xmlString);
    XNamespace wd = "urn:com.something.report/Worker_ID_Data_-_Store";

    IEnumerable<XElement> worker = doc.Descendants(wd + "Report_Entry");

    var query = (from x in doc.Descendants(wd + "Report_Entry")

                 let jobFamilyAttribute = x.Element(wd + "Job_Family_Group").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor").FirstOrDefault()

                 select new Employee
                 {
                    JobFamily = jobFamilyAttribute.Value
                 });
    employee.AddRange(query);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
    log.Error("An error occurred while trying to parse the XML: " + ex);
}
return employee;

That works great. There are some additional nodes I select, but for simplicity sake, this is enough.

Now, when I try to select a node that is missing (which might be 1 out of 1000 records), I get errors for Object reference not set to an instance of an object.

That makes sense, since the node being selected isn't there. After reading many postings, it looks like I should do a ternary operator to account for the null parent. Something like this:

let homePhoneAttribute = x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone") == null ? "" : x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor").FirstOrDefault()

That isn't quite right: Type of conditional expression cannot be determined because there is no implicit conversion between 'string' and 'System.Xml.Linq.XAttribute'

Even if I cast it to a string or object, it compiles, but then I only get the very first value for all records when I addrange:

let homePhoneAttribute = x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone") == null ? (string)"" : x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor").FirstOrDefault().Value

So, my long winded question is, how do I properly cast and account for null nodes while still being able to select with a let?

I think it has to be some kind of DefaultIfEmpty() casting?

4
  • You get the first record because you have FirstOrDefault() on the query. Would a slightly different query work - let homePhoneAttribute = (string)x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone") == null ? String.Empty : x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor"); - note this will give you a collection, which you can then do with what you want.
    – Tim
    Jan 8, 2016 at 21:40
  • Thanks Tim for the help... that doesn't quite work either. Still casting issues: Type of conditional expression cannot be determined because there is no implicit conversion between 'string' and 'System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable<System.Xml.Linq.XAttribute>' Jan 8, 2016 at 21:45
  • Perhaps this: let homePhoneAttribute = (string)x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone") == null ? null : x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor"); - replace the String.Empty with null. Though that might cause downstream problems. Perhaps instead of null, use new IEnumerable<XAttribute>(); or something similar?
    – Tim
    Jan 8, 2016 at 21:49
  • Hi Tim - I still need to select the XAttribute Value. homePhoneAttribute.FirstOrDefault().Value. As soon as I do that, it breaks the casting again. If I don't use FirstOrDefault(), I get this 'IEnumerable<XAttribute>' does not contain a definition for 'Value' and no extension method 'Value' accepting a first argument of type 'IEnumerable<XAttribute>' could be found Jan 8, 2016 at 22:00

1 Answer 1

1

You can use the following expression :

let homePhoneAttribute = (string)x.Elements(wd + "Home_Phone")
                                  .Attributes(wd + "Descriptor")
                                  .FirstOrDefault()

By using x.Elements() instead of the singular form Element() you can avoid exception in case the element is not found. And then, by casting FirstOrDefault() return value to string you can avoid exception in case the return value is null.

dotnetfiddle demo

The demo shows that homePhoneAttribute variable simply contains empty string when wd:Home_Phone element is missing. No exception thrown.

UPDATE :

If you want multiple attributes value (List<string>) instead of just just the first, you can modify the above LINQ a bit as follow :

let homePhoneAttribute = x.Elements(wd + "Home_Phone")
                          .Attributes(wd + "Descriptor")
                          .Select(o => o.Value)
                          .ToList()
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  • You are right that it casts properly, but it it also only selects the first phone number: select new Employee { JobFamily = jobFamilyAttribute.Value, HomePhone = homePhoneAttribute, }); employee.AddRange(query); Jan 9, 2016 at 13:57
  • @MattKnight check update section above. I assumed you want List<string> as value of ` HomePhone` property
    – har07
    Jan 9, 2016 at 14:09
  • I appreciate your help. When I use .ToList(), I still need to specify something in the select: select new Employee { JobFamily = jobFamilyAttribute.Value, HomePhone = homePhoneAttribute need something here, }); I need to select the XAttribute.Value, like I am doing for JobFamily. If I use FirstorDefault(), every record is assigned the same phone number. Maybe I should add some more data and work with you on .Net Fiddle? Jan 9, 2016 at 14:25
  • @MattKnight sure, providing .NET fiddle containing base codes and representative sample data would make it easy for people to help
    – har07
    Jan 9, 2016 at 14:50
  • Your answer did the trick, let homePhoneAttribute = x.Elements(wd + "Home_Phone") .Attributes(wd + "Descriptor") .Select(o => o.Value) .ToList() And then in the select I used HomePhone = homePhoneAttribute.FirstOrDefault(), Thanks for your help! Jan 9, 2016 at 18:36

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