Does AutoMapper not have a native approach to updating of nested lists where the instances need to be removed, added or updated?
I am using AutoMapper in my ASP.Net Core application with EF Core to map my API resources to my models. This has been working fine for most of my application, but I am not pleased with my solution for updating mapped nested lists where the listed instances need to persist. I don't want to overwrite the existing list, I want to delete instances that are no longer in my incoming resource, add new instances, and update existing instances.
The models:
public class MainObject
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public List<SubItem> SubItems { get; set; }
}
public class SubItem
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public int MainObjectId { get; set; }
public MainObject MainObject { get; set; }
public double Value { get; set; }
}
The resources:
public class MainObjectResource
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public ICollection<SubItemResource> SubItems { get; set; }
}
public class SubItemResource
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public double Value { get; set; }
}
The controller:
public class MainController : Controller
{
private readonly IMapper mapper;
private readonly IMainRepository mainRepository;
private readonly IUnitOfWork unitOfWork;
public MainController(IMapper mapper, IMainRepository mainRepository, IUnitOfWork unitOfWork)
{
this.mapper = mapper;
this.mainRepository = mainRepository;
this.unitOfWork = unitOfWork;
}
[HttpPut("{id}")]
public async Task<IActionResult> UpdateMain(int id, [FromBody] MainObjectResource mainObjectResource)
{
MainObject mainObject = await mainRepository.GetMain(id);
mapper.Map<MainObjectResource, MainObject>(mainObjectResource, mainObjectResource);
await unitOfWork.CompleteAsync();
return Ok();
}
}
The mapping profile:
public class MappingProfile : Profile
{
public MappingProfile()
{
CreateMap<MainObject, MainObjectResource>();
CreateMap<SubItem, SubItemResource>();
CreateMap<MainObject, MainObjectResource>().ReverseMap()
.ForMember(m => m.Id, opt => opt.Ignore())
.ForMember(m => m.SubItems, opt => opt.Ignore())
.AfterMap((mr, m) => {
//To remove
List<MainObject> removedSubItems = m.SubItems.Where(si => !mr.SubItems.Any(sir => si.Id == sir.Id)).ToList();
foreach (SubItem si in removedSubItems)
m.SubItems.Remove(si);
//To add
List<SubItemResource> addedSubItems = mr.SubItems.Where(sir => !m.SubItems.Any(si => si.Id == sir.Id)).ToList();
foreach (SubItemResource sir in addedSubItems)
m.SubItems.Add( new SubItem {
Value = sir.Value,
});
// To update
List<SubItemResource> updatedSubItems = mr.SubItems.Where(sir => m.SubItems.Any(si => si.Id == sir.Id)).ToList();
SubItem subItem = new SubItem();
foreach (SubItemResource sir in updatedSubItems)
{
subItem = m.SubItems.SingleOrDefault(si => si.Id == sir.Id);
subItem.Value = sir.Value;
}
});
}
}
What I am doing here is a custom mapping, but I feel this is such a generic case that I expect AutoMapper to be able to handle this by some extension. I have seen some examples where the mapping profile uses a custom mapping (.AfterMap), but then the actual mapping is done by a static instance of AutoMapper. I am not sure if that is appropriate for my use of AutoMapper through dependency injection: I am not an experienced programmer but it doesn't seem sound to me.