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I have an array of objects with the property of ProductId. I would like to use a lambda expression to select all the distinct values of ProductId that are within my object array products.

Here I get the products

var products = Database.SqlQuery<StructuredProduct>("query").ToArray();

And I can group by distinct values of ProductId, but it still returns an array of objects, rather than an array of ProductIds

var productIds= products.GroupBy(p => p.ProductId).Select(group => group.First()).ToArray();

Any idea on how to use a Lambda Expression on the products array to get all distinct values of ProductIds?

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  • This looks a little scary, like the Database.SqlQuery() method will force you to write code that's crazy-vulnerable to sql injection issues. I hope there is a mechanism to accept query parameter data separate from sql command string. Oct 18, 2019 at 14:39

3 Answers 3

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var productIds= products.Select(p => p.ProductId).Distict();

But it may be even better to do this directly on the database, as part of the "query" sql command.

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  • var productIds= products.GroupBy(p => p.ProductId).Select(group => group.First()).Select(p=>p.ProductId).ToArray(); will also work. But above solution is better
    – aspxsushil
    Oct 18, 2019 at 14:44
  • This worked perfect thank you! I added a .ToArray() at the end and it was exactly what I needed. Unfortunately I can't include it in the "query" sql command due to some other limitations.
    – LRID
    Oct 18, 2019 at 14:55
  • @LRID Adding .ToArray() is usually a bad idea. Instead, define your variable as an IEnumerable Oct 18, 2019 at 15:33
  • @JoelCoehoorn Never using ToArray() is an even worse idea, because you should not leave lazy sequences allocated if you know they will be fully enumerated. The consequence is repeatedly re-evaluating your collection, and risking side-effects (I've accidentally created access counters when generating class instances using LINQ), and thus keeping things in scope to the garbage collector. Operations such as Sort() and Distinct() mostly coerce full evaluation anyway, since how can you know if a value in set 1 is not in set 2 without scanning it completely? Oct 18, 2019 at 21:29
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With LINQ method .Distinct()

var productIds = products.Select(p => p.ProductId).Distinct();
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  • 1
    17 seconds :) . Oct 18, 2019 at 14:42
  • 1
    @JoelCoehoorn i’m compiled with optimization: on :D
    – T-moty
    Oct 18, 2019 at 14:44
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I've only ever done GroupBy operations with the query comprehension syntax. If you do that, group / by / into, the thing you group into has a property named key. That would contain your 'productid`

var results = from product in products
    group product by ProductId
    into individualProducts
    select individualProducts;

var productsArray = individualProducts.Select(p => p.Key).ToArray();

The items individualProducts collection each have a Key and a collection of things that have the same productid.

If you do this directly out of the database, all your operations will get nicely combined into a single SQL statement that will get executed when your code gets to .ToArray()

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