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?
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.let homePhoneAttribute = (string)x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone") == null ? null : x.Element(wd + "Home_Phone").Attributes(wd + "Descriptor");
- replace theString.Empty
withnull
. Though that might cause downstream problems. Perhaps instead ofnull
, usenew IEnumerable<XAttribute>();
or something similar?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