There are a couple of ways around this, but the simplest is the most direct equivalent. I'm assuming that your actual query requirement is that you get all OID
values with counts - including 0s - of matching rows in the other table.
Here's your source query (reformatted and with some aliases to make it simpler):
SELECT
b.OID,
(
SELECT COUNT(*)
FROM tbl_result_subject_brand rs
WHERE rs.brand_id = b.OID
) AS NewsCount
FROM tbl_brand b
We can do almost exactly the same thing in at least some LINQ ORMs:
using (var ctx = new MuleContext())
{
var query =
from b in ctx.tbl_brand
select new
{
b.OID,
NewsCount = ctx.tbl_result_subject_brand.Count(rs => rs.brand_id == b.OID)
};
var list = query.ToList();
}
This works for me when using Linq2DB, which converts it to an SQL query that is basically identical to your original. Exactly the same structure anyway. Other ORMs might not be so OK with the above format.
The other option is groups and joins. Just be aware that joins are inner by default. You need to use join...into...DefaultIfEmpty
to get a left outer join
equivalent, then handle the missing values. It's a mildly painful process.
This has two forms: group-then-join or join-then-group. The first uses a sub-query to get the counts, then joins to that query to get the values you want:
var rsCounts =
from rs in ctx.tbl_result_subject_brand
group 0 by rs.brand_id into grp
select new { brand_id = grp.Key, NewsCount = (int?)grp.Count() };
var query =
from b in ctx.tbl_brand
join rs in rsCounts on b.OID equals rs.brand_id into rstmp
from rs in rstmp.DefaultIfEmpty()
select new
{
b.OID,
NewsCount = rs.NewsCount ?? 0
};
(You can do it in a single statement. It's harder to figure out what it's doing that way sometimes.)
The other version joins the tables together then groups on the relevant columns. This checks for missing rows using a Sum
instead of Count
:
var query =
from b in ctx.tbl_brand
join rs in ctx.tbl_result_subject_brand on b.OID equals rs.brand_id into rstmp
from rs in rstmp.DefaultIfEmpty()
group (rs.brand_id == null ? 0 : 1) by b.OID into grp
select new
{
OID = grp.Key,
NewsCount = grp.Sum()
};
Not pretty, but it works.
I'd suggest you have a look at what the SQL looks like when you run the above. Sometimes the SQL is a bit weird.