24

Entities:

    public class Room
    {
        public Room()
        {
            this.Reservations = new HashSet<Reservation>();
        }

        public int Id { get; set; }

        public decimal Rate { get; set; }

        public int HotelId { get; set; }

        public virtual Hotel Hotel { get; set; }

        public virtual ICollection<Reservation> Reservations { get; set; }
    }

    public class Hotel
    {
        public Hotel()
        {
            this.Rooms = new HashSet<Room>();
        }

        public int Id { get; set; }

        public string Name { get; set; }

        public virtual ICollection<Room> Rooms { get; set; }
    }

    public class Reservation
    {
        public int Id { get; set; }

        public DateTime StartDate { get; set; }

        public DateTime EndDate { get; set; }

        public string ContactName { get; set; }

        public int RoomId { get; set; }

        public virtual Room Room { get; set; }
    }

  public class ExecutiveSuite : Room
  {
  }

  public class DataContext : DbContext
    {
        public DbSet<Hotel> Hotels { get; set; }

        public DbSet<Reservation> Reservations { get; set; }

        public DbSet<Room> Rooms { get; set; }

        protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder)
        {
            modelBuilder.Entity<Room>()
                .HasKey(r => r.Id)
                .HasRequired(r => r.Hotel)
                .WithMany(r => r.Rooms)
                .HasForeignKey(r => r.HotelId);

            modelBuilder.Entity<Hotel>()
                .HasKey(h => h.Id);

            modelBuilder.Entity<Room>()
                .HasMany(r => r.Reservations)
                .WithRequired(r => r.Room)
                .HasForeignKey(r => r.RoomId);

        }
    }

The client code(console app):

static void Main(string[] args)
        {
            // initialize and seed the database
            using (var context = new DataContext())
            {
                var hotel = new Hotel { Name = "Grand Seasons Hotel" };
                var r101 = new Room { Rate = 79.95M, Hotel = hotel };
                var es201 = new ExecutiveSuite { Rate = 179.95M, Hotel = hotel };
                var es301 = new ExecutiveSuite { Rate = 299.95M, Hotel = hotel };

                var res1 = new Reservation
                {
                    StartDate = DateTime.Parse("3/12/2010"),
                    EndDate = DateTime.Parse("3/14/2010"),
                    ContactName = "Roberta Jones",
                    Room = es301
                };
                var res2 = new Reservation
                {
                    StartDate = DateTime.Parse("1/18/2010"),
                    EndDate = DateTime.Parse("1/28/2010"),
                    ContactName = "Bill Meyers",
                    Room = es301
                };
                var res3 = new Reservation
                {
                    StartDate = DateTime.Parse("2/5/2010"),
                    EndDate = DateTime.Parse("2/6/2010"),
                    ContactName = "Robin Rosen",
                    Room = r101
                };

                es301.Reservations.Add(res1);
                es301.Reservations.Add(res2);
                r101.Reservations.Add(res3);

                hotel.Rooms.Add(r101);
                hotel.Rooms.Add(es201);
                hotel.Rooms.Add(es301);

                context.Hotels.Add(hotel);
                context.SaveChanges();
            }

            using (var context = new DataContext())
            {
                context.Configuration.LazyLoadingEnabled = false;
                // Assume we have an instance of hotel
                var hotel = context.Hotels.First();

                // Explicit loading with Load() provides opportunity to filter related data 
                // obtained from the Include() method 
                context.Entry(hotel)
                       .Collection(x => x.Rooms)
                       .Query()
                       .Include(y => y.Reservations)
                       .Where(y => y is ExecutiveSuite && y.Reservations.Any())
                       .Load();

                Console.WriteLine("Executive Suites for {0} with reservations", hotel.Name);

                foreach (var room in hotel.Rooms)
                {
                    Console.WriteLine("\nExecutive Suite {0} is {1} per night", room.Id,
                                      room.Rate.ToString("C"));
                    Console.WriteLine("Current reservations are:");
                    foreach (var res in room.Reservations.OrderBy(r => r.StartDate))
                    {
                        Console.WriteLine("\t{0} thru {1} ({2})", res.StartDate.ToShortDateString(),
                                          res.EndDate.ToShortDateString(), res.ContactName);
                    }
                }
            }

            Console.WriteLine("Press <enter> to continue...");
            Console.ReadLine();
        }



using ( var context = new DataContext() )
{

        //context.Configuration.LazyLoadingEnabled = false;

        // Assume we have an instance of hotel
        var hotel = context.Hotels.First();
        var rooms = context.Rooms.Include( r => r.Reservations ).Where( r => r is ExecutiveSuite && r.Reservations.Any() ).Where( r => r.Hotel.Id == hotel.Id );
        Console.WriteLine( "Executive Suites for {0} with reservations", hotel.Name );

        foreach ( var room in hotel.Rooms )
        {
           Console.WriteLine( "\nExecutive Suite {0} is {1} per night", room.Id,
                             room.Rate.ToString( "C" ) );
           Console.WriteLine( "Current reservations are:" );
           foreach ( var res in room.Reservations.OrderBy( r => r.StartDate ) )
           {
              Console.WriteLine( "\t{0} thru {1} ({2})", res.StartDate.ToShortDateString(),
                                res.EndDate.ToShortDateString(), res.ContactName );
           }
        }
     }

I tried projecting and putting it in an anonymous object:

       var hotel = context.Hotels.Select(h =>
        new 
        {   
            Id = h.Id,
            Name = h.Name,
            Rooms = h.Rooms.Where(r => r.Reservations is ExecutiveSuite && r.Reservations.Any())
        }).First();

but I get an exception: "DbIsOfExpression requires an expression argument with a polymorphic result type that is compatible with the type argument."

Now, if you would notice, I implemented it in two different ways, first was by explicitly loading the related entities, second was by having two different queries, my question would be, is there a way I can load my object graph and filter the entities I "Include" with just a single trip from the database?

6
  • In both example, there are just 2 queries to the database. The first one for Hotel and then for Rooms and Reservations. What else do you want?
    – sachin
    Sep 22, 2016 at 10:52
  • Why not include everything in the Include()? Something like: context.Hotels.Include("Rooms.Reservations")?
    – haim770
    Sep 22, 2016 at 10:54
  • @sachin Include other related entities and then filter/sort those related entities using a single trip to the database if possible. Sep 22, 2016 at 12:24
  • @haim770 Include other related entities and then filter/sort those related entities using a single trip to the database if possible. Sep 22, 2016 at 12:25
  • @RandelRamirez, Try and see
    – haim770
    Sep 22, 2016 at 12:52

4 Answers 4

23

There are two ways to filter include Entity.

  • Using a projection (See @Eldho answer)
  • Using a third party library

Disclaimer: I'm the owner of the project Entity Framework Plus

The EF+ Query IncludeFilter allows to easily filter included entities.

context.Entry(hotel)
       .Collection(x => x.Rooms)
       .Query()
       .IncludeFilter(y => y.Reservations
                            .Where(z => z is ExecutiveSuite && z.Reservations.Any())
       .Load();

Under the hood, the library does exactly a projection.

Wiki: EF+ Query Include Filter

EDIT: Answer subquestion

You almost did it. The rooms were included and filtered, but you didn't include the reservations.

var hotel = context.Hotels
    // Include only executive suite with a reservation
    .IncludeFilter(x => x.Rooms.Where(y => y is ExecutiveSuite && y.Reservations.Any()))
    // Include only reservation from executive suite
    .IncludeFilter(x => x.Rooms.Where(y => y is ExecutiveSuite).Select(z => z.Reservations))
    .First();

EDIT: Answer Comment

How can we include multilevel properties with include filter

You can include multilevel by specifying each path (one per IncludeFilter)

So qry.Include("Rooms.Hotel") become:

qry.IncludeFilter(x => x.Rooms)
   .IncludeFilter(x => x.Rooms.Select(y => y.Hotel))

EDIT: Answer Comment

does EF+ have dotnet 5.0 support?

Yes, it supports dotnet 5.0 and EF Core 5.0. However, for IncludeFilter, you should also look at the filtered include built-in directly in EF Core 5: https://www.learnentityframeworkcore5.com/whats-new-in-ef-core-5/filtered-included

11
  • I tried using it without explicitly loading and that doesn't seem to work. => context.hotels.IncludeFilter(h => h.rooms.Where(x is ExecutiveSuite && x.Reservations.Any())) Why is it like that? I'm getting a different result. Am I using it correctly Sep 26, 2016 at 11:46
  • 1
    @RandelRamirez, I just did a test and everything seem to work. Which result are you getting? One limitation of this feature is previously loaded related entities will always be included (even if it doesn't satisfy IncludeFilter predicate). If you want, you can also report this issue on our GitHub forum to make it easier to track than using Stack Overflow: github.com/zzzprojects/EntityFramework-Plus/issues Sep 26, 2016 at 15:06
  • What do you mean by "without explicitly loading"? You need to either use .Load() or .ToList() (or any other LINQ immediate method) Sep 26, 2016 at 15:11
  • I have here a repo, if you have time you could look at it and see the result I'm trying to get. Because I might be using your api the wrong way and there would no need to file for a bug. Thanks! :) github.com/randelramirez/EF6_LoadingEntitiesAndNavigation Project's name is FilteringAndOrderingRelatedEntities Sep 26, 2016 at 16:30
  • Let me know if the new answer is working. I get the same result from my side. Sep 26, 2016 at 19:33
14

Note that it is not currently possible to filter which related entities are loaded. Include will always bring in all related entities Msdn reference

Request this feature here

In order to filter child collection you can try to select that to model or anonymous projection.

var anonymousProjection = dbContext.CustomerEntity
                                 .Where(c => ! c.IsDeleted)
                                 .Select(x=> new 
                                  {
                                       customers = x,
                                       orders = x.Orders.Where(h=>h.IsDeleted)
                                  }).ToList();

Similar answers

2
11

At all costs upgrade to EF 5.0+ and take advantage of EF 5.0+ eager loading capabilities, specifically Microsoft Docs Eager Loading - Filtered Include

Example:

context.hotel.Include(y => y.Reservations.Where(resy=>resy.type==ExecutiveSuite && resy.Any())).ToListAsync();

2
  • 6
    At the time of writing (2022), this is the right answer for modern apps
    – Charlino
    Mar 10, 2022 at 7:37
  • -1 The phrase "At all costs" is seldom the right answer for a business. Businesses must take into account lots of factors and cost is a major one.
    – Kabua
    Oct 28, 2022 at 21:09
-1

I was thinking of bringing a new perspective to this. Even though this will not solve the problem, it might help you. Using AutoMapper, you can filter the collections before putting them in destination object. I have setup my solution in a way that everything is mapped in DTOs before any action so I'm using AutoMapper as a filter for those Includes. Works like a charm...

2
  • Too bad you didn't include some sample code.
    – kipusoep
    Feb 1, 2021 at 9:39
  • Hmm, well, AutoMapper works like that automatically. If you use ProjectTo (my personal opinion is that you really should use it if you're going directly to DB) then AutoMapper generates the underlying expression tree and it gets resolved. So when you're building the AutoMapper profile you can basically just "map" it there and there you go. It's described in the basic AutoMapper examples.
    – Cubelaster
    Feb 5, 2021 at 8:02

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