17

I have an image column in the product table in a SQL Server database. The image column is used to save the images as bytes.

I know it is better to make a separate table for images, but I did not do that, so is there any way to exclude the image column when I am trying to list the products only without the images?

2
  • 1
    yourDbSet.Select(x => new YourType { DesiredProperty = x.DesiredProperty, ... })
    – haim770
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:22
  • It would be great if there was an rxJS-like map operator, which you could use to null out a property before the query executes.
    – Sean
    Aug 23, 2020 at 8:45

2 Answers 2

18

Create a DTO with all the properties you need except the image property:

public class YourDTO
{
    public string YourProperty1 { get; set; }
    public string YourProperty2 { get; set; }
    // etc
}

You can then do:

var productDto = context.Products
                        .Where(x => x.Id == productId)
                        .Select(x => new YourDTO {
                            YourProperty1 = x.DbProperty1,
                            YourProperty2 = x.DbProperty2        
                            // etc, don't include the image column
                        });

Update:

If you don't want to map the results to YourDTO, you can project into an anonymous type:

var product = context.Products
                     .Where(x => x.Id == productId)
                     .Select(x => new {
                         x.DbProperty1,
                         x.DbProperty2        
                         // etc, don't include the image column
                     });

...and if you want to provide a custom name for each of the properties of the anonymous type:

var product = context.Products
                     .Where(x => x.Id == productId)
                     .Select(x => new {
                         YourProperty1 = x.DbProperty1,
                         YourProperty2 = x.DbProperty2        
                         // etc, don't include the image column
                     });

All of the above approaches would be functionally equivalent to the following SQL:

SELECT p.DbProperty1, p.DbProperty2 
FROM products p
WHERE p.Id = WhateverId;
5
  • Wouldn't custom mapping on DTO be not sufficient enough?
    – mrogal.ski
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:36
  • Why would it be "not sufficient enough"? The query would be translated on the SQL side as SELECT dbProperty1, dbProperty2 FROM Product. You can also project to an anonymous type instead - see my update.
    – trashr0x
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:40
  • That's what I meant. "It will be translated to the SQL" so you could only make a DTO and map it accordingly. From what I know EF has automated this process enough to just create that DTO and map it.
    – mrogal.ski
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:44
  • Can this work with a grandparent .Include()? If you have a navigational property to a grandparent entity, the fields get lost from the query...
    – Sean
    Aug 23, 2020 at 8:56
  • The anonymous type solution (last code example) was exactly what I was looking for. I have some columns with lots of data in them which I want to exclude from the select. This is a small and elegant solution for this.
    – gridr
    May 5, 2021 at 8:43
-3
product.Entity<Product>().Exclude(e => e.image); 

or

product.Entity<Product>().Ignore(e => e.image);
6
  • i am using code first approach and at the same time , i cant find the except and ignore , here down my statement ctx.Products.Where(p => p.isActive == true).OrderBy(p => p.Name).ToList().Select(p => ProductInformation.Create(p)); where ProductInformation is a typescript class
    – Laila
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:33
  • 2
    @Laila You've called ToList() which executes the whole query and dumps it into the List<> object.
    – mrogal.ski
    Aug 24, 2017 at 10:37
  • 1
    where do i find either Exclude or Ignore is this an ef core thing?
    – Seabizkit
    Mar 30, 2019 at 14:10
  • @Seabizkit you need to add System.Data.Entity reference Apr 6, 2019 at 22:02
  • 18
    You haven't provided any context at all, that's why I gave you a -1. I guess your suggestion is based on the OnModelCreating method of the DbContext class? And so it isnt a way to ignore on select, but ignore for the complete DbContext.
    – kipusoep
    Jul 11, 2019 at 10:44

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