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I am trying to dynamically create a linq expression at runtime using PredicateBuilder from http://www.albahari.com/nutshell/predicatebuilder.aspx.

I currently have a method that takes a list of criteria objects, and then parses those into multiple predicates much as described in this post.

So currently, my code supports the following scenario:

WHERE 
    ((a == <val1>) AND (b == <val2>) AND (c == <val3>))
OR
    ((a == <val4>) AND (b == <val2>) AND (c == <val3>))

But I need it to work like this:

WHERE 
    ((a == <val1> OR a == <val4>) AND (b == <val2>) AND (c == <val3>))
OR
    ((a == <val7>) AND (b == <val5>) AND (c == <val6>))

How can I make it so that I can "group" two "ORs" together so the logic flows properly? I don't want "a OR a AND b AND c", I need "(a OR a) AND b and C".

1 Answer 1

6

The "dynamic" aspect of these predicates isn't clear at all. Why bother with PredicateBuilder when you could assemble the required expression with && and || expressions (with proper parentheses of course)?

In any case, here's a way to accomplish what you want with PredicateBuilder:

var p1 = PredicateBuilder.False<Foo>()
                         .Or(foo => foo.A == <val1>)
                         .Or(foo => foo.A == <val4>)
                         .And(foo => foo.B == <val2>)
                         .And(foo => foo. C == <val3>);

var p2 = PredicateBuilder.False<Foo>()
                         .Or(foo => foo.A == <val7>)
                         .And(foo => foo.B == <val5>)
                         .And(foo => foo.C == <val6>);

var finalPredicate = p1.Or(p2);

The idea is to create the individual "simple" expressions, and then finally OR them together to produce the final predicate.

2
  • I guess I don't understand the rules applied when linq is doing order of operations. I assumed that a statement that was "Or().Or().And().And()" would yield something like "a is 1 or (a is 4 and b is 2 and c is 3). How does it know to "or" the a's together? Aug 15, 2011 at 15:23
  • Just follow the method calls and you will see how: For example, p1 =((((First) OR (Second)) AND Third) AND Fourth). That is the same as your definition by the rules of boolean algebra. By the way, you might also want to look at Operator precedence and associativity for guidance on how to do it the "normal" way. Just parenthesize when you need to override the default precedence.
    – Ani
    Aug 15, 2011 at 15:35

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