First of all, with LINQ you can never change the source. You can only extract data from the source. After that you can use the extracted data to update the source.
I need to update the property "ToBeChanged" to "True" if second (alist2) list properties (country and region) matches to first(alist1) and false in otherwise.
This is not a proper requirement. alist1
is a sequence of obj1
objects. I think, that you want the property ToBeChanged of a certain obj2 to be true if any of the obj1 items in alist1 has a [country, region] combination that matches the [country, region] combination of the obj2 concerned.
requirement Get all obj2 in alist2, that have a [country, region] combination that matches any of the [country, region] combinations of the obj1 objects in alist1.
You probably thought about using Where
for this. Something like "Where [country, region] combination in the other list". Whenever you need to find out if an item is in another list, consider to use one of the overloads of Enumerable.Contains
The problem is, that the [Country, Region] combination in every obj2 can be converted to an object of class obj1, but if you want to check if they are equal, you will have a compare by reference, while you want a compare by value.
There are two solutions for this:
- create an EqualityComparer that compares obj1 by Value
- create [Country, Region] as anonymous type. Anonymous types always compare by value.
The latter is the most easy, so we'll do that one first.
Use anonymous types for comparison
First convert alist into anonymous type containing [Country, Region] combinations:
var eligibleCountryRegionCombinations = alist.Select(obj1 => new
{
Country = obj1.Country,
Region = obj1.Region,
});
Note that I don't use ToList at the end: the enumerable is created, but the sequence has not been enumerated yet. In LINQ terms this is called lazy or deferred execution.
IEnumerable<obj2> obj2sThatNeedToBeChanged = alist2.Select(obj2 => new
{
CountryRegionCombination = new
{
Country = obj2.Country,
Region = obj2.Region,
},
Original = obj2,
})
.Where(item => eligibleCountryRegionCombinations.Contains(
item.CountryRegionCombination))
.Select(item => item.Original);
CountryRegionCombination
is an anonymous type of the same type as the anonymous items in eligibleCountryRegionCombinations. Therefore you can use Contains
. Because the items are anonymous type, the equality comparison is comparison by value.
The final select will remove the anonymous type, and keep only the Original.
Note that the query is still not enumerated.
foreach (var obj2 in obj2sThatNeedToBeChanged.ToList())
{
obj2.ToBeChanged = true;
}
It can be dangerous to change the source that you are enumerating. In this case it is not a problem, because the field that you change is not used to create the enumeration. Still I think it is safer, because of possible future changes, to do a ToList before you start changing the source.
Create an equality comparer
One of the overload of Enumerable.Contains has a parameter comparer. This expects an IEqualityComparer<obj1>
class Obj1Comparer : EqualityComparer<obj1>
{
public static IEqualityComparer<obj1> ByValue {get;} = new Obj1Comparer();
private static IEqualityComparer<string> CountryComparer => StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase;
private static IEqualityComparer<string> RegionComparer => StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase;
public override bool Equals (obj1 x, obj1 y)
{
if (x == null) return y == null; // true if both null, false if x null, but y not null
if (y == null) return false; // because x not null
// optimization:
if (Object.ReferenceEquals(x, y)) return true;
if (x.GetType() != y.GetType()) return false;
return CountryComparer.Equals(x.Country, y.Country)
&& RegionComparer.Equals(x.Region, y.Region);
}
To make it easy to change equality of countries, I created a separate comparer for countries and for regions. So if later you want to compare case sensitive, or if you change Country from string to a foreign key to a table of countries, then changes will be minimal.
You also need to override GetHashCode. If x equals y, then GetHashCode should rerturn the same value. Not the other way round: if x and y different they may return the same hash code. However, code will be more efficient if you have more different Hash codes.
public override int GetHashCode (obj1 x)
{
if (x == null) return 87966354; // just a number
return CountryComparer.GetHashCode(x.Country)
^ RegionComparer.GetHashCode(x.Region);
}
Which HashCode you return depends on how often this will be called, for instance in dictionaries, comparers like Contains, etc.
How "different" are the Countries and Regions? A different Country will probably also mean a different region. So maybe it is efficient enough if you only calculate the Hash code for the Country. If a Country has many, many regions, then it will probably be better to calculate the hash code for regions as well If a Region is only in one Country (OberAmmerGau is probably only in Germany), or in only a few Regions (how many regions "New Amsterdam" will there be?), then you won't have to check the Country at all.
Because we have an equality comparer, we don't need to convert alist to an anonymous type, we can specify that Contains
should compare by value.
IEqualityComparer<obj1> comparer = Obj1Comparer.ByValue;
IEnumerable<obj2> obj2sThatNeedToBeChanged = alist2.Select(obj2 => new
{
Obj1 = new Obj1
{
Country = obj2.Country,
Region = obj2.Region,
},
Original = obj2,
})
.Where(item => alist.Contains(item.CountryRegionCombination, comparer))
.Select(item => item.Original);
Fast method: Extension method
The fastest method, and maybe also the most simple one, is to create an extension method.
private static IEqualityComparer<string> CountryComparer => StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase;
private static IEqualityComparer<string> RegionComparer => StringComparer.OrdinalIgnoreCase;
public static IEnumerable<Obj2> WhereSameLocation(
this IEnumerable<Obj2> source,
IEnumerable<Obj1> obj1Items)
{
// TODO: what to do if source == null?
foreach (Obj2 obj2 in source)
{
// check if there is any obj1 with same [Country, Region]
if (obj1Items
.Where(obj1 => CountryComparer.Equals(obj2.Country, obj1.Country)
&& RegionComparer.Equals(obj2.Region, obj1.Region))
.Any())
{
yield return obj2;
}
}
}
Usage:
IEnumerable<Obj1> alist = ...
IEnumerable<Obj2> alist2 = ...
IEnumerable<obj2> obj2sThatNeedToBeChanged = alist2.WhereSameLocation(alist);
obj1
andobj2
classes (especially, ifobj2
is a specialization ofobj1
) you may want to look at inheritance. Those two class names aren't great names for classes, by the way