Question

How do you expose a LINQ query as an ASMX web service? Usually, from the business tier, I can return a typed DataSet or DataTable which can be serialized for transport over ASMX.

How can I do the same for a LINQ query? Is there a way to populate a typed DataSet or DataTable via a LINQ query?

public static MyDataTable CallMySproc()
{
    string conn = "...";

    MyDatabaseDataContext db = new MyDatabaseDataContext(conn);
    MyDataTable dt = new MyDataTable();

    // execute a sproc via LINQ
    var query = from dr
                in db.MySproc().AsEnumerable
                select dr;

    // copy LINQ query resultset into a DataTable -this does not work !    
    dt = query.CopyToDataTable();

    return dt;
}

How can I get the result set of a LINQ query into a DataSet or DataTable? Alternatively, is the LINQ query serializable so that I can expose it as an ASMX web service?

Was it helpful?

Solution

As mentioned in the question, IEnumerable has a CopyToDataTable method:

IEnumerable<DataRow> query =
    from order in orders.AsEnumerable()
    where order.Field<DateTime>("OrderDate") > new DateTime(2001, 8, 1)
    select order;

// Create a table from the query.
DataTable boundTable = query.CopyToDataTable<DataRow>();

Why won't that work for you?

OTHER TIPS

To perform this query against a DataContext class, you'll need to do the following:

MyDataContext db = new MyDataContext();
IEnumerable<DataRow> query = 
    (from order in db.Orders.AsEnumerable()
        select new
        {
            order.Property,
            order.Property2
        })
    as IEnumerable<DataRow>;
return query.CopyToDataTable<DataRow>();

Without the as IEnumerable<DataRow>; you will see the following compilation error:

Cannot implicitly convert type 'System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable' to 'System.Collections.Generic.IEnumerable'. An explicit conversion exists (are you missing a cast?)

Make a set of Data Transfer Objects, a couple of mappers, and return that via the .asmx.
You should never expose the database objects directly, as a change in the procedure schema will propagate to the web service consumer without you noticing it.

If you use a return type of IEnumerable, you can return your query variable directly.

Create a class object and return a list(T) of the query.

If you use the return type of IEnumerable.It helps return your query variable directly.

MyDataContext db = new MyDataContext();
IEnumerable<DataRow> query = 
    (from order in db.Orders.AsEnumerable()
        select new
        {
            order.Property,
            order.Property2
        })
    as IEnumerable<DataRow>;
return query.CopyToDataTable<DataRow>();
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