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I have this piece of code for fetching and filtering results of products from a database:

if (userParams.MinPrice > 0 && userParams.MaxPrice != 999999999) 
{
    products = products.Where(p => (p.Price >= userParams.MinPrice) && 
                                   (p.Price <= userParams.MaxPrice));
}

This gets executed successfully when only the userParams.MinPrice is provided but fails when userParams.MaxPrice is provided.

The error that I get is this.

An unhandled exception has occurred while executing the request.

System.InvalidOperationException: An exception was thrown while attempting to evaluate a LINQ query parameter expression. To show additionalinformation call EnableSensitiveDataLogging() when overriding DbContext.OnConfiguring.

System.NullReferenceException: Object reference not set to an instance of an object.

at lambda_method(Closure )
at Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.Query.ExpressionVisitors.Internal.ParameterExtractingExpressionVisitor.Evaluate(Expression expression, String& parameterName).

Does anyone know the solution to this? Please help

4
  • Max price is null. if (userParams.MinPrice != null && userParams.MinPrice > 0 && userParams.MaxPrice != null && userParams.MaxPrice != 999999999)
    – jdweng
    Jan 19, 2019 at 22:27
  • The MaxPrice is not null since it has the default value of 999999999 if the user does not provide their own value. Jan 20, 2019 at 13:10
  • You must be setting it to null after it is set to default value. The default value is not shown.
    – jdweng
    Jan 20, 2019 at 13:42
  • I have debugged, stepped through and confirmed that it is not null when passing it to the where clause. Jan 20, 2019 at 14:10

1 Answer 1

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It's pretty simple, your error explains it. userParams.MaxPrice is null. So you need to add null checking to it. A simple way would be to change your query to:

if (userParams.MinPrice > 0 && userParams.MaxPrice != null && userParams.MaxPrice != 999999999) 
{
    products = products.Where(p => (p.Price >= userParams.MinPrice) && 
                                   (p.Price <= userParams.MaxPrice));
}

Though depending on your logic you may need to change things up slightly. The key point is to not assume that a property has a value, if it's nullable, then you need to first validate it's not null then check it.

Should also add that you could in theory do userParams.MaxPrice.GetValueOrDefault() != 999999999 assuming that this is a nullable int or something like that.

7
  • The userParams.MaxPrice has a default value of 999999999 if the user does not provide their own value.I have been debugging the code and the userParams.MaxPrice is not null. Jan 20, 2019 at 12:38
  • Previously this was working but on the next day it started showing the error. Jan 20, 2019 at 12:39
  • Debug and step through. You'll see that your assumption about your userParams object must be incorrect. The only way to get the error you listed is to have a null value.
    – gilliduck
    Jan 20, 2019 at 13:56
  • I have debugged and stepped through each step and checked the value of maxPrice and indeed it is not null. if the user does not provide their own value the default value is applied. when the user provides their value i have confirmed that it is shown while i debug. i don't know whats the real cause of this problem. Jan 20, 2019 at 14:09
  • 1
    I have finally got where the problem was. I had to step through each process that leads to checking the value of MaxPrice and found a previous if statement that changed the value of products thus assigning the MaxPrice as null. Jan 20, 2019 at 21:26

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