HI there I am hoping for some help with a query I have.
I have this query
var group =
from r in CustomerItem
group r by r.StoreItemID into g
select new { StoreItemID = g.Key,
ItemCount = g.Count(),
ItemAmount = Customer.Sum(cr => cr.ItemAmount),
RedeemedAmount = Customer.Sum(x => x.RedeemedAmount)
};
I am returning my results to a list so I can bind it listbox.
I have a property called EntryType which is an int. There are 2 available numbers 1 or 2
Lets say I had 3 items that my query is working with
2 of them had the EntryType = 1 and the 3rd had EntryType2. The first records had a ItemAmount of 55.00 and the 3rd had a ItemAmount of 50.00
How can I group using something simlar to above but minus the ItemAmount of 50.00 from the grouped amount to return 60.00?
Any help would be great!!
It's not really clear what the question is - are you just trying to ignore all items with an entry type of 2? To put it another way, you only want to keep entries with an entry type of 1? If so, just add a where clause:
var group = from r in CustomerItem
where r.EntryType == 1
group r by r.StoreItemID into g
select new {
StoreItemID = g.Key, ItemCount = g.Count(),
ItemAmount = Customer.Sum(cr => cr.ItemAmount),
RedeemedAmount = Customer.Sum(x => x.RedeemedAmount)
};
Change ItemAmount = ... to:
ItemAmount =
g.Where(x => x.EntryType == 1).Sum(cr => cr.ItemAmount) -
g.Where(x => x.EntryType == 2).Sum(cr => cr.ItemAmount),
I changed Customer to g because this seems to be an error, but it's not clear to me from your question what you mean here, so maybe this change is not what you want.
A slightly more concise method is to use test the entry type in the sum and use the ternary operator to choose whether to add the positive or negative value:
ItemAmount = g.Sum(cr => cr.EntryType == 1 ? cr.ItemAmount : -cr.ItemAmount),
This gives the value of 60.00 as you required.
Related
Linq newbie here, struggling with my first GroupBy query.
I have a list of objects of type KeywordInstance which represents a keyword, and the ID of the database record to which the keyword was applied.
Keyword RecordID
macrophages 1
macrophages 2
cell cycle 3
map kinase 2
cell cycle 1
What I want is a collection of all keywords, with a list of the RecordIDs to which each keyword was applied.
Keyword RecordIDs
macrophages 1, 2
cell cycle 1, 3
map kinase 2
I tried using Linq to get it into a new object. I only managed to get the distinct keywords.
var keywords = allWords
.GroupBy(w => w.keyword)
.Select(g => new {keyword = g.Key});
The problem is that I can't seem to get the values of g in any way. g is of the type IGrouping<String, KeywordInstance> and by documentation, it only has the property Key, but not even the property Value. All the examples I have seen on the Internet for groupby just tell me to select g itself, but the result of
var keywords = allWords
.GroupBy(w => w.keyword)
.Select(g => new {keyword = g.Key, RecordIDs = g});
is not what I want.
Any try to get something out of g fails with the error message System.Linq.IGropuing<string, UserQuery.KeywordInstance> does not have a definition for [whatever I tried].
What am I doing wrong here?
I think you are close to you solution.
var keywords = allWords
.GroupBy(w => w.keyword)
.Select(g => new
{
keyword = g.Key,
RecordIDs = g.Select(c => c.ID)
});
Just Select the records you need.
The reason you are seeing the Keyword-column as well as the ID-column, is becuase it's part of g
var keywords = allWords.GroupBy(w => w.keyword);
foreach (var itm in keywords)
{
var list = itm.ToList();
//list returns all of the original properties/values objects from allwords.
//itm.key returns w.keyword
}
I need to return all records (items) that has a part (X) so I can use that in a group or .GroupBy afterwards
Using this summary data:
ItemName PartName
1 A
1 B
2 A
3 C
So Item1 has two parts (A,B), etc...
I need a LINQ query that will
- find all items that have part A (i.e items 1 and 2)
- return all rows for all these items
1 A
1 B
2 A
Notice that the end result returned the row (1 B) because Item1 has PartA and so I need to get back all rows for Item1.
I was looking at something like:
let items = from data in summary where data.PartName == A select new { data.ItemName } // to get all the items I need
But then, now that I have that list I need to use it to get all the rows for all items listed, and I can't seem to figure it out ...
Actual Source Code (for reference):
NOTE:
Recipe = ITEM
Ingredient = PART
(I was just trying to make it simpler)
ViewFullRecipeGrouping = (
from data in ViewRecipeSummary
group data by data.RecipeName into recipeGroup
let fullIngredientGroups = recipeGroup.GroupBy(x => x.IngredientName)
select new ViewFullRecipe()
{
RecipeName = recipeGroup.Key,
RecipeIngredients = (
from ingredientGroup in fullIngredientGroups
select new GroupIngredient()
{
IngredientName = ingredientGroup.Key
}
).ToList(),
ViewGroupRecipes = (
from data in ViewRecipeSummary
// this is where I am looking to add the new logic to define something I can then use within the next select statement that has the right data based on the information I got earlier in this query.
let a = ViewRecipeSummary.GroupBy(x => x.RecipeName)
.Where(g => g.Any(x => x.IngredientName == recipeGroup.Key))
.Select(g => new ViewRecipe()
{
RecipeName = g.Key,
IngredientName = g.Select(x => x.IngredientName)
})
select new GroupRecipe()
{
// use the new stuff here
}).ToList(),
}).ToList();
Any help would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
I believe this does what you want:
var data = /* enumerable containing rows in your table */;
var part = "X";
var items = new HashSet<int>(data
.Where(x => x.PartName == part)
.Select(x => x.ItemName));
var query = data.Where(x => items.Contains(x.ItemName));
If I understand your comment at the end, I believe this also does what you want:
var query = data
.GroupBy(x => x.ItemName)
.Where(g => g.Any(x => x.PartName == part))
.Select(g => new
{
ItemName = g.Key,
PartNames = g.Select(x => x.PartName)
});
The following code works, but it's not a nice code. (low performance)
I have a dictionary with value and key.
First i go trough every webcodes who exist. Then i load all participants in a list (where webcode equals the actual webcode in the foreach). After that i add the data (parameter of the webcode and a count of participants to the dictionary).
Guid compID = Guid.Parse(wID);
ChartModel webcodes = new ChartModel();
webcodes.Title = "Webcodes Statistics";
webcodes.Data = new Dictionary<string, int>();
var webcodesData = db.t_Webcode;
foreach (var w in webcodesData)
{
var wData = db.t_Participant.Where(t => t.FK_Competition == compID && t.Webcode == w.Webcode);
if (wData.Count() != 0)
webcodes.Data.Add(w.Parameter, wData.Count());
}
ViewBag.Webcodes = webcodes;
TIA
You need something along these lines:
webcodes.Data = (from w in db.t_Webcode
join p in db.t_Participant on w.Webcode equals p.Webcode
where p.FK_Competition == compID
group w by w.Parameter into g
select new { g.Key, Count = g.Count() }).ToDictionary();
I can't test it but that is the type of query you need.
This will assume that you have relationships defined in your database and that your LINQ to SQL datacontext are aware of them. If not, you will need to join manually on t_Participants from tWebcode.
This should execute in 1 single SQL query, instead of 1 query per row in tWebcode.
var webcodesAndNoOfParticipants =
from webcode in db.tWebcode
// Define number of participants for this webcode
let numberOfParticipants = webcode.t_Participants.Count(participant => participant.FK_Competition == compID)
where numberOfParticipants > 0
select new {
WebcodeParameter = webcode.Parameter,
NoOfParticipants = numberOfParticipants
};
webcodes.Data = webcodesAndNoOfParticipants.ToDictionary(x => x.WebcodeParameter, x => x.NoOfParticipants);
I have the following LINQ conditional where clause query that produces a result of weights:
From this, I'd like to take the result set and join on another table, tblPurchases
var result = weights.Join(getsuppliersproducts.tblPurchases,
w => new { w.MemberId, w.MemberName, w.LocationId, w.UnitId },
p => new { p.MemberId, p.MemberName, p.LocationId, p.UnitId },
(w, p) => p);
In this second table, I have two columns I would like to perform an aggreagte function on, a sum on PurchaseQuantity and a count of UnitID.
So in its raw format, tblPurchases would look like so:
MemberID LocationID UnitId SupplierID SupplierStatus Purchases
1 1 ab Sup1 Live 10
1 1 abc Sup1 Live 10
1 1 abcd Sup2 Dead 50
From my results data set, I would like the output to look like so:
MemberID LocationID SupplierID SupplierStatus UnitIdCount Total Purchases
1 1 Sup1 Live 2 50
Also, with these amendments, can I still return this to a List?
How do I implement this using LINQ? I have tried, and failed miserably.
(To those who have seen my previous posts, I'm trying to cover all angles so I can fully understand the concept of what is going on in both SQL and LINQ)
That query will return an IEnumerable where each of the Purchases matches the MemberId, MemberName, LocationId and UnitId in the original Weights query. You can only easily do one aggregate at a time, so
var result = weights.Join(getsuppliersproducts.tblPurchases,
w => new { w.MemberId, w.MemberName, w.LocationId, w.UnitId },
p => new { p.MemberId, p.MemberName, p.LocationId, p.UnitId },
(w, p) => p).ToList();
Int32 count = result.Count();
Double quantity = result.Sum(p => p.PurchaseQuantity);
Is that what you're trying to do?
EDIT, after your reply of I would like to reutrn a list of tblPurchases with two new columns, the sum of Purchase Quantity and count of unit ID.
This gives a flat output:
var query = Weights.GroupJoin(
Purchases,
w => new {w.MemberId, w.LocationId},
p => new {p.MemberId, p.LocationId},
(w,p) => new {w.MemberId, w.LocationId, Count = p.Count(), Sum = p.Sum(x => x.Purchases)} );
Note that at the point we do the (w, p) => new {} that w is a single Weight and p is a list of Purchases matching that weight, so you can still keep all of teh (hierarchical) data:
var query = Weights.GroupJoin(
Purchases,
w => new {w.MemberId, w.LocationId},
p => new {p.MemberId, p.LocationId},
(w,p) => new {w.MemberId, w.LocationId, Count = p.Count(), Sum = p.Sum(x => x.Purchases), Purchases = p} );
Can any one help me convert the below code to LINQ?
Select Catg,Count(*) From Mycatg where IsPublic=1 or FirstName='XXX' Group By Catg .
In C#, something like:
var query = from category in mycatg
where category.IsPublic == 1
|| category.FirstName == "XXX"
group 1 by category.Catg into grouped
select new { Catg = grouped.Key,
Count = grouped.Count() };
The projection of "1" makes it clear that all we need is the key of the grouping and the count - the individual entries in each grouping are irrelevant.
Using lambda syntax and dot notation:
var query = mycatg.Where(category => category.IsPublic == 1
|| category.FirstName == "XXX")
.GroupBy(category => category.Catg,
category => 1)
.Select(grouped => new { Catg = grouped.Key,
Count = grouped.Count() });