Pergunta

Before adding this question, I did search on stackoverflow for similar ones but I couldnt find. Most of the questions over internet were using LIKE with a string (for eg LIKE '%ABC%') but I need to compare with an existing column of a different table.

I need to write a linq query for the select statement as below -

 select * 
from [dbo].[BaseClaim]
where WPId like (select WPId from UserProfiles where ID='1459') 

I came up with below linq query but its not working as expected -

     var result = (from claimsRow in context.BaseClaims
                          where (from upRow in context.UserProfiles
                                 where upRow.ID == 1459
                                 select upRow.WPId).Contains(claimsRow.WPId)
                          select claimsRow);

and the sql that above linq generates is as follows -

   SELECT 
   [Extent1].[WPId] AS [WPId]
   FROM [dbo].[BaseClaim] AS [Extent1]
   WHERE  EXISTS (SELECT 
             1 AS [C1]
                 FROM (SELECT 
                       [UserProfiles].[ID] AS [ID], 
                       [UserProfiles].[WPId] AS [WPId]      
                       FROM [dbo].[UserProfiles] AS [UserProfiles]) AS [Extent2]
                   WHERE (1459 = [Extent2].[ID]) AND ([Extent2].[WPId] = [Extent1].[WPId]))

So its clear that my linq is not working as its comparing the baseclaim.wpID to userprofiles.wpid instead of LIKE.

Foi útil?

Solução

There's no direct equivalent, but there are some methods work similarly, depending on the pattern.

  • string.Contains("pattern") is equivalent to LIKE '%pattern%'
  • string.StartsWith("pattern") is equivalent to LIKE 'pattern%'
  • string.EndsWith("pattern") is equivalent to LIKE '%pattern'

However, in your SQL query the pattern is dynamic, so I don't think there is a good way to convert it straight to Linq. If you know at design time that the pattern fits one of these cases you can use this:

var result =
    from claimsRow in context.BaseClaims
    let wpId = context.UserProfiles.Single(upRow => upRow.ID == 1459).WPId
    where claimsRow.WPId.Contains(wpId) // or StartsWith or EndsWith
    select claimsRow;

Or possibly

var wpId =
    (from upRow in context.UserProfiles
     where upRow.ID == 1459
     select upRow.WPId)
    .Single();
var result =
    from claimsRow in context.BaseClaims
    where claimsRow.WPId.Contains(wpId) // or StartsWith or EndsWith
    select claimsRow;

Outras dicas

You must use contain for example

 .Where(a => a.Name.Contains("someStrig")

Contains generate Like when the parameter is constant

Hope it helps

This query works with Entity Framework

from claimsRow in context.BaseClaims
let wpId = context.UserProfiles.Where(upRow => upRow.ID == 1459) 
                               .Select(upRow => upRow.WPId)
                               .FirstOrDefault() 
where wpId.Contains(claimsRow.WPId)
select claimsRow

But instead of LIKE it generates CHARINDEX operation

SELECT * FROM  [dbo].[BaseClaims] AS [Extent1]
LEFT OUTER JOIN  (SELECT TOP (1) [Extent2].[WPId] AS [WPId]
                  FROM [dbo].[UserProfiles] AS [Extent2]
                  WHERE [Extent2].[ID] = 1459 ) AS [Limit1] ON 1 = 1
WHERE (CHARINDEX([Extent1].[WPId], [Limit1].[WPId])) > 0

Note: with Linq to SQL it throws NotSupportedException:

Only arguments that can be evaluated on the client are supported for the String.Contains method.

EDITED:

The asker said that he has wild cards (%) in his UserProfile.WPId that should work like the wildcards in SQL.

You can use this one:

BaseClaims.Where(b => UserProfiles.Where(u => u.ID == "1459").Any(u => u.WPId.Contains(b.WPId))).ToList();

In this example, I'm trying to mimic your entities/tables.

    static void Main(string[] args)
    {
        List<BaseClaim> BaseClaims = new List<BaseClaim>()
        {
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "11123411" }, //match 1
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "11123123" }, //match 2
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "44423411" }, //match 3
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "444AAAA" }, //match 3
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "444BBBB" }, //match 3
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "444QWQEQW" }, //match 3
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "2314" },
            new BaseClaim(){ WPId = "3214" }
        };
        List<UserProfile> UserProfiles = new List<UserProfile>()
        { 
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="%112341%", ID="1459" }, //match 1
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="%123", ID="1459" }, //match 2
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="444%", ID="1459" }, //match 3
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="5555", ID="1459" },
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="2222", ID="1459" },
            new UserProfile(){ WPId="1111", ID="4444" },
        };

        char[] asterisk = { '%' };
        List<BaseClaim> result = BaseClaims.Where(b => UserProfiles.Where(u => u.ID == "1459").Any(u => u.WPId.StartsWith("%") && u.WPId.EndsWith("%") ? b.WPId.Contains(u.WPId.Trim(asterisk)) :
                                                                                                        u.WPId.StartsWith("%") ? b.WPId.EndsWith(u.WPId.Trim(asterisk)) : 
                                                                                                        u.WPId.EndsWith("%") ? b.WPId.StartsWith(u.WPId.Trim(asterisk)) :
                                                                                                         false)).ToList();
        //this will result to getting the first 3 BaseClaims

    }
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