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I have a model like below

public class PropsModel
{
    public int props_id { get; set; }
    public string props_name { get; set; }
    public int props_order { get; set; }
}

Sample values

[
   { 1, "red" ,0 }
   { 2, "green", 3}
   { 1, "light red" ,1 }
   { 3, "yellow", 2}
   { 2, "blue", 6}    
]

Result STRING : "red/light red" , "yellow" , "green/blue"

Output string rules

  • Separate strings with the same id by / (Example: "red/light red") and then comma separate all combined strings with Props_Order value

Current implementation

    List<string> _inflections = new List<string>();
    var distinctIDs = inflections_model.Select(x => x.form_id).Distinct(); //find distinct IDs
    foreach (int _id in distinctIDs) //for each distinct ID , join the string  to LIST
    {
     string inflection_val = string.Join(" / ", from item in inflections_model 
                                                      where item.form_id==_id
                                                      select item.props_name );
        _inflections.Add(inflection_val);
    }
    string inflection_string = string.Join(", ", _inflections);  //combine processed STRINGS to a comma separate list 

This produces needed result , but not in the order (props_order is not used anywhere).

Can we make this to a single LINQ query?

2
  • confused which one should be selected as the answer from below comments, Few of them returns the same result and requesting readers to use the optimal solution for them
    – Sebastian
    Dec 6, 2019 at 5:50
  • Just pick the first one that suited you, otherwise people will keep posting answers as is happening now. Dec 12, 2019 at 7:58

5 Answers 5

2

You may use LINQ GroupBy and Select:

var data = inflections_model.GroupBy(p=> p.props_id) // this gives you groups
  .Select(g =>  
      String.Join("/", g.OrderBy(r=>r.props_order)
                        .Select(r=>r.props_name)))  
var inflection_string = string.Join(", ",data)
1
  • r=>props_order doesnt exists in current context
    – Sebastian
    Dec 6, 2019 at 5:39
2

This orders the groups of elements based on the lowest value of props_order in each group

string.Join(", ",
    inflections_model
        .GroupBy(o => o.props_id)
        .OrderBy(g => g.Min(o => o.props_order))
        .Select(g => string.Join("/", g.Select(o => o.props_name))));
2

You need to GroupBy items props_id and OrderBy props_order as following one single LINQ:

    var _inflections = inflections_model.OrderBy(o => o.props_order)
                                                .GroupBy(i => i.props_id)
                                                .Select(s => String.Join("/", s.Select(p => p.props_name)));

    var inflection_string = String.Join(",", _inflections);

It will give following result as desired:

"red/light red","yellow","green/blue"

1
  • even you get sorted output, GroupBy does not guarantee that order will be preserved. It works for LINQ2Objects but it will not work for SQL for example. OrderBy and then GroupBy is misleading and tricky. It will be better to order by props_order the group itself.
    – fenixil
    Dec 6, 2019 at 5:33
2

You can try below implementation

var groups = list.GroupBy(x => x.props_id); //Group By Id

List<string> stringList = new List<string>(); //stringList to store common records with /
foreach(var grp in groups)
    stringList.Add(string.Join("/", list.Where(x => x.props_id == grp.Key).Select(y => y.props_name)));  //Logic to select property names from common groups

Console.WriteLine(string.Join(", ", stringList)); //Print result

Output:

red/light red, green/blue, Yellow

.NET Fiddle

1
var list = models.OrderBy(x => x.props_order).ToLookup(x => x.props_id, x => x.props_name).Select(name => string.Join("/", name));
var result = string.Join(",", list);

Prints

"red/light red,yellow,green/blue"

Better performance with Lookup

On machine,

GroupBy => takes 1.6215 milliseconds

Lookup => takes 0.2072 milliseconds

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