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I am looking to implement a system whereby a use that 'build' conditions and then return the resulting data back from the database. At present, there is a stored procedure which generates SQL on the fly and executes it. This is a particular issue that I want to remove.

My problem is coming from the fact that I can have multiple fields within my criteria, and for each of these fields, there could be 1 or more values, with different potential operators.

For example,

from t in Contacts 
where t.Email == "email@domain.com" || t.Email.Contains ("mydomain")
where t.Field1 == "valuewewant"
where t.Field2 != "valuewedontwant"
select t

The field, criteria and operator are stored in the database (and List<FieldCriteria>) and would be some thing like this (based on above);

Email, Equals, "email@domain.com"
Email, Contains, "mydomain" Field1,
Equals, "valuewewant" Field2,
DoesNotEqual, "valuewedontwant"

or

new FieldCriteria
{
FieldName = "Email",
Operator = 1, 
Value = "email@mydomain.com"
}

So using the information that I have, I want to be able to build a query with any number of conditions. I have seen previous links to Dynamic Linq and PredicateBuilder, but am not able to visualise this as a solution to my own problem.

Any suggestions would be appreciated.

Update

Following on from the suggestion about Dynamic Linq, I came up with a very basic solution, using a Single Operator, with 2 Fields and multiple Criteria. A little crude at the moment as coded in LinqPad, but the results are exactly what I wanted;

enum Operator
{
    Equals = 1,
}

class Condition
{
    public string Field { get; set; }
    public Operator Operator { get; set;}
    public string Value { get; set;}
}

void Main()
{
    var conditions = new List<Condition>();

    conditions.Add(new Condition {
        Field = "Email",
        Operator = Operator.Equals,
        Value = "email1@domain.com"
    });

    conditions.Add(new Condition {
        Field = "Email",
        Operator = Operator.Equals,
        Value = "email2@domain.com"
    });

    conditions.Add(new Condition {
        Field = "Field1",
        Operator = Operator.Equals,
        Value = "Chris"
    });

    var statusConditions = "Status = 1";

    var emailConditions = from c in conditions where c.Field == "Email" select c;
    var field1Conditions = from c in conditions where c.Field == "Field1" select c;


    var emailConditionsFormatted = from c in emailConditions select string.Format("Email="{0}"", c.Value);
    var field1ConditionsFormatted = from c in field1Conditions select string.Format("Field1="{0}"", c.Value);

    string[] conditionsArray = emailConditionsFormatted.ToArray();
    var emailConditionsJoined = string.Join("||", conditionsArray);
    Console.WriteLine(String.Format("Formatted Condition For Email: {0}",emailConditionsJoined));

    conditionsArray = field1ConditionsFormatted.ToArray();
    var field1ConditionsJoined = string.Join("||", conditionsArray);
    Console.WriteLine(String.Format("Formatted Condition For Field1: {0}",field1ConditionsJoined));



    IQueryable results = ContactView.Where(statusConditions);

    if (emailConditions != null)
    {
        results = results.Where(emailConditionsJoined);
    }

    if (field1Conditions != null)
    {
        results = results.Where(field1ConditionsJoined);
    }

    results = results.Select("id");

    foreach (int id in results)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(id.ToString());
    }
}

With an SQL generated of;

-- Region Parameters
DECLARE @p0 VarChar(1000) = 'Chris'
DECLARE @p1 VarChar(1000) = 'email1@domain.com'
DECLARE @p2 VarChar(1000) = 'email2@domain.com'
DECLARE @p3 Int = 1
-- EndRegion
SELECT [t0].[id]
FROM [Contacts].[ContactView] AS [t0]
WHERE ([t0].[field1] = @p0) AND (([t0].[email] = @p1) OR ([t0].[email] = @p2)) AND ([t0].[status] = @p3)

And Console Output:

Formatted Condition For Email: Email="email1@domain.com"||Email="email2@domain.com"
Formatted Condition For Field1: Field1="Chris"

Just need clean this up and add the other Operators and it is looking good.

If anyone has any comments on this so far, any input would be appreciated

See Question&Answers more detail:os

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1 Answer

The trick with LINQ would be to build an Expression from the data. As an example, to illustrate the example shown:

var param = Expression.Parameter(typeof(MyObject), "t");

var body = Expression.Or(
            Expression.Equal(Expression.PropertyOrField(param, "Email"), Expression.Constant("email@domain.com")),
            Expression.Call(Expression.PropertyOrField(param, "Email"), "Contains", null, Expression.Constant("mydomain"))
        );

body = Expression.AndAlso(body, Expression.Equal(Expression.PropertyOrField(param, "Field1"), Expression.Constant("valuewewant")));
body = Expression.AndAlso(body, Expression.NotEqual(Expression.PropertyOrField(param, "Field2"), Expression.Constant("valuewedontwant")));

var lambda = Expression.Lambda<Func<MyObject, bool>>(body, param);

var data = source.Where(lambda);

In particular, note how AndAlso can be used to compose the various operations (the same as multiple Where, but simpler).


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