4

I have a DbContext with a lot of DbSets. Every DbSet should have a function to get a page of items from the set, with a given pageSize and ordered by a specific sortOrder. Something like:

var pageItems = dbContext.Posts
    .Where(post => post.BlogId == blogId)
    .OrderBy(some sortorder)
    .Skip(pageNr * pageSize)
    .Take(pageSize);

I want to be able to do this with all my DbSets, so I have created an extension method where one of the parameters specifies the foreign key to compare and another the value this foreign key should have.

public static IQueryable<TSource> GetPage<TSource>(this IQueryable<TSource> source,
    int pageNr, int pageSize,
    Expression<Func<TSource, Tproperty>> keySelector, Tproperty comparisonValue)
{
    return  source
    .Where( ??? )
    .OrderBy(some sortorder)
    .Skip(pageNr * pageSize)
    .Take(pageSize);
}

How to convert the keySelector in a predicate suitable for Where?

6
  • Jon Skeet arriving Jul 14, 2016 at 10:34
  • You can try to use Expression.LessThan and take pass it body of your keySelector and comprasionValue converted to Expression.Constant
    – Guru Stron
    Jul 14, 2016 at 10:36
  • Let say the Where is resolved. How you will resolve the OrderBy?
    – Ivan Stoev
    Jul 14, 2016 at 10:49
  • 1
    The easier way to do this is just to pass the expression for the predicate rather than the expression for the keySelector and the comparisonValue separately.
    – Martijn
    Jul 14, 2016 at 11:06
  • 1
    In my opinion it is an unnecessary layer of abstraction. It not only does not save you much code since you still need to write the selections and orders etc, but also it will limit the flexibility and readability. Jul 14, 2016 at 13:11

5 Answers 5

3

How to convert the keySelector in a predicate suitable for Where?

This is quite easy, but I have no idea how are you going to handle ordering. Anyway, here is how you can do what are you asking for:

public static IQueryable<TSource> GetPage<TSource, TKey>(this IQueryable<TSource> source,
    int pageNr, int pageSize,
    Expression<Func<TSource, TKey>> keySelector, TKey comparisonValue)
{
    var predicate = Expression.Lambda<Func<TSource, bool>>(
        Expression.Equal(keySelector.Body, Expression.Constant(comparisonValue)),
        keySelector.Parameters);

    return source
        .Where(predicate)
        //.OrderBy(some sortorder) ??
        .Skip(pageNr * pageSize)
        .Take(pageSize);
}
2

You're looking for a way to get an Expression<Func<TSource, boolean>> from an Expression<Func<TSource, Tproperty>> keySelector and a Tproperty comparisonValue in such a way that it can be translated in to a store expression by the Entity Framework.

That means that the trivial

public static Expression<Func<TSource, bool>> KeyPredicateNaive<TSource, Tproperty>(Expression<Func<TSource, Tproperty>> keySelector, Tproperty comparisonValue)
{
  return (TSource source) =>EqualityComparer<Tproperty>.Default.Equals(keySelector.Compile()(source), comparisonValue);
}

won't work. This can't be translated to a store expression.

We need to construct the expression manually. What we need is an equality expression with the key selector as its left value, and a constant expression with the comparison value as value as its right value. We can construct that as follows:

public static Expression<Func<TSource, bool>> KeyPredicate<TSource, Tproperty>(Expression<Func<TSource, Tproperty>> keySelector, Tproperty comparisonValue)
{
  var bd = Expression.Equal(keySelector.Body, Expression.Constant(comparisonValue));
  return Expression.Lambda<Func<TSource, bool>>(bd, keySelector.Parameters);
}

The result of that can be passed to your where class. Slimmed down (so that it'll compile and run), your method will look like

public static IQueryable<TSource> GetPage<TSource>(this IQueryable<TSource> source,
    int pageSize,
    Expression<Func<TSource, Tproperty>> keySelector, Tproperty comparisonValue)
{
    return source
    .Where(KeyPredicate(keySelector, comparisonValue)
    .Take(pageSize);
}

Would I use this? Probably not. It's easier all round to pass the predicate as a lambda to the function directly rather than constructing the expression yourself. But it's certainly a possibility.

4
  • This method works. I already found some articles about creating expression like you did. However I couldn't find how to create the lambda expression out of the BinaryExpresson. You are right, it is easier to pass the Func<Tsource, bool> instead of passing Func<Tsource, int>, and it gives the same level of type checking. Jul 14, 2016 at 13:36
  • Still, it's good to have the technique in your toolbelt, so next time it'll be easier to determine whether it's a good idea or not if you're thinking about something similar.
    – Martijn
    Jul 14, 2016 at 13:55
  • Same as this answer, given 2 hours earlier stackoverflow.com/a/38372514/360211
    – weston
    Jul 14, 2016 at 15:14
  • @weston that's pretty much a code-only answer, without explaining anything about it.
    – Martijn
    Jul 14, 2016 at 15:46
0

try this and see if it helps

Expression<Func<TSource, bool>> keySelector

or simply

Func<TSource, bool> keySelector
1
  • The problem is, I do not have the Expression<Func<TSource, bool>>. I have Expression<Func<TSource, int>>, and I want to compare it with an int, to get an Expression<Func<TSource, bool>>. Jul 14, 2016 at 11:42
0

Given this code:

sealed class SwapVisitor : ExpressionVisitor
{
    private readonly Expression _from;
    private readonly Expression _to;

    public SwapVisitor(Expression from, Expression to)
    {
        _from = from;
        _to = to;
    }

    public override Expression Visit(Expression node)
    {
        return node == _from ? _to : base.Visit(node);
    }
}

static Expression<Func<TInput, bool>> Combine<TInput, TOutput>(
    Expression<Func<TInput, TOutput>> transform,
    Expression<Func<TOutput, bool>> predicate)
{
    var swap = new SwapVisitor(predicate.Parameters[0], transform.Body);
    return Expression.Lambda<Func<TInput, bool>>(
        swap.Visit(predicate.Body), transform.Parameters);
}

You can:

 .Where(Combine(keySelector, key => key == comparisonValue))

So that is creating a new Expression, with the body of the passed expression keySelector and the new expression for the comparison.

Thanks to Combine Lambda Expressions

0

You are writing extension to queryable source, yes? So just pass expressions and filter source:

public static IQueryable<TSource> GetPage<TSource, TKey>(this IQueryable<TSource> source,
    Expression<Func<TSource, bool>> predicate,
    Expression<Func<TSource, TKey>> keySelector,
    int pageNr, int pageSize
    )
{
    return  source
       .Where(predicate)
       .OrderBy(keySelector)
       .Skip(pageNr * pageSize)
       .Take(pageSize);
}

Usage:

db.Posts.GetPage(p => p.Author == "Bob", p => p.Date, 5, 10);

Note: in your approach you have problem with sorting (second expression) and all you get is passing two parameters p => p.Author, "Bob" instead of passing one ready-to use expression p => p.Author == "Bob".


But I would move predicate and keySelector out of GetPage method. Let this method focus on paging only (as method name states):

public static IQueryable<TSource> GetPage<TSource, TKey>(this IQueryable<TSource> source,
    int pageNr, int pageSize)
{
    return  source.Skip(pageNr * pageSize).Take(pageSize);
}

Usage:

db.Posts.Where(p => p.Author == "Bob").OrderBy(p => p.Date).GetPage(5, 10);

Or if you have repository

postsRepository.GetByAuthor("Bob").GetPage(5, 10);

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