i'm working with EF6 code first, and i used this answer to map a List<stirng> in my entitie.
This is my class
[Key]
public string SubRubro { get; set; }
[Column]
private string SubrubrosAbarcados
{
get
{
return ListaEspecifica == null || !ListaEspecifica.Any() ? null : JsonConvert.SerializeObject(ListaEspecifica);
}
set
{
if (string.IsNullOrWhiteSpace(value))
ListaEspecifica.Clear();
else
ListaEspecifica = JsonConvert.DeserializeObject<List<string>>(value);
}
}
[NotMapped]
public List<string> ListaEspecifica { get; set; } = new List<string>();
It works perfectly to storage my list as Json, but now i need to perform a linq query, and i'm trying this
var c = db.CategoriaAccesorios.Where(c => c.ListaEspecifica.Contains("Buc")).First();
And it's throwing
System.NotSupportedException: The specified type member
'ListaEspecifica' is not supported in LINQ to Entities. Only
initializers, entity members, and entity navigation properties are
supported.
what is logical.
Is there any way to perform a query like this?
The problem here is that LINQ to Entities does not understand how to convert your query to the back-end (SQL) language. Because you're not materializing (i.e. converting to .NET) the results of the query until you filter it, LINQ tries to convert your query to SQL itself. Since it's not sure how to do that, you get a NotSupportedException.
If you materialize the query first (I.e. call a .ToList()) then filter, things will work fine. I suspect this isn't what you want, though. (I.e. db.CategoriaAccesorios.ToList().Where(c => c.ListaEspecifica.Contains("Buc")).First();)
As this answer explains, your issue is the EF to SQL Conversion. Obviously you want some way to workaround it, though.
Because you are JSON serializing, there are actually a couple options here, most particularly using a LIKE:
var c =
(from category
in db.CategoriaAccessorios
where SqlMethods.Like(c.SubrubrosAbarcados, "%\"Buc\"%")
select category).First()
If EF Core, allegedly Microsoft.EntityFrameworkCore.EF.Functions.Like should replace SqlMethods.Like.
If you have SQL Server 2016+, and force the SubrubrosAbarcados to be a JSON type, it should be possible to use a raw query to directly query the JSON column in particular.
If you're curious about said aspect, here's a sample of what it could look like in SQL Server 2016:
CREATE TABLE Test (JsonData NVARCHAR(MAX))
INSERT INTO Test (JsonData) VALUES ('["Test"]'), ('["Something"]')
SELECT * FROM Test CROSS APPLY OPENJSON(JsonData, '$') WITH (Value VARCHAR(100) '$') AS n WHERE n.Value = 'Test'
DROP TABLE Test
I was able to do something like this via CompiledExpression.
using Microsoft.Linq.Translations;
// (...) namespace, class, etc
private static readonly CompiledExpression<MyClass, List<string>> _myExpression = DefaultTranslationOf<MyClass>
.Property(x => x.MyProperty)
.Is(x => new List<string>());
[NotMapped]
public List<string> MyProperty
{
get { return _myExpression.Evaluate(this); }
}
I hope there are better / prettier solutions though ;)
I have some C# classes which represent database objects, some of which contain one or more other custom objects or enumerables of custom objects. I'm using dapper for queries, and slapper to map to the custom objects. It works great for single object. I can easily grab a parent object with a specific ID from the database, do some inner joins, and map it and all the things it "owns" to my custom objects in C#. Problem comes when I want to do a select over multiple parent-IDs.
Some context, let's say I have a person, that person has a list of hobbies which have an ID and a Description, a list of days they're available which also have an ID and Description, and maybe another custom field such as whether they have or are even willing to be around children which can also boil down to a simple ID and Description. We'll call that last field child status. I'd write a select statement like this:
SELECT
,person.id as Id
,person.first_name as FirstName
,person.last_name as LastName
,hobby.Id as Hobbies_Id
,hobby.Description as Hobbies_Description
,avail.Id as Availabilities_Id
,avail.Description as Availabities_Description
,child.Id as ChildStatus_Id
,child.Description as ChildStatus_Description
FROM
users.users person
JOIN
users.userhobbies uhobby
ON
person.id = uhobby.UserId -- one-to-many with relational table
JOIN
users.avail hobby
ON
uhobby.HobbyId = hobby.Id
JOIN
users.useravailabilities uavail
ON
person.id = uavail.UserId -- one-to-many with relational table
JOIN
users.availabilities avail
ON
uavail.AvailId = avail.Id
JOIN
users.childstatuses child
ON
person.ChildStatusId = child.Id
Then I want this mapped to a user like this:
class User
{
public Guid Id {get; set;}
public string FirstName {get; set;}
public string LastName {get; set;}
public IEnumerable<Hobby> Hobbies {get; set;}
public IEnumerable<Availability> Availabilities {get; set;}
public ChildStatus ChildStatus {get; set;}
}
Since I'm using exact naming conventions and everything here, the query from Dapper and the Automapping work great just like this:
// Using the above sql in a variable
var data = Connection.Query<dynamic>(sql);
var dataReal = Slapper.AutoMapper.MapDynamic<User>(data);
return dataReal;
This works great, but it only ever returns one user. I have a similar method which takes an ID and all of my test users can be retrieved perfectly by passing the ID. I've tried scouring the internet, looking through documentation, and all I found was this: https://github.com/SlapperAutoMapper/Slapper.AutoMapper/issues/57 who seemed to just slip through the cracks. I also tried mapping the dynamic data to various other structures with no luck. Thanks in advance!
Update:
I've come up with a somewhat brutal, "sledgehammer" type solution. I'm not sure if, at this point, I'm forcing myself to use Slapper when there might be a more convenient solution. However, I wanted to ensure anyone in a similar situation might have a chance at making it work. Here's the new C# section:
var data = Connection.Query<dynamic>(sql);
IEnumerable<Guid> Ids = data.Select(row => (Guid)row.id).Distinct();
List<User> results = new List<User>();
foreach (Guid Id in Ids)
{
IEnumerable<dynamic> rows = data.Where(x => { return ((Guid) x.id).Equals(Id); });
User model = (Slapper.AutoMapper.MapDynamic<User>(rows, false) as IEnumerable<User>).FirstOrDefault();
if (model != null)
{
results.Add(model);
}
}
return results;
As you can see, I'm generating a list of unique "primary object" ID's and selecting those rows into their own lists, which I then pass to Slapper. I've passed the "cache = false" parameter to avoid squeezing unrelated data into every object after the first. I could probably get around this by actually keeping the UserHobby/UserAvailability/UserPhoto Ids in place, but I don't like the way that makes my object look. Hopefully this helps someone.
I'm not familiar with Slapper, but I'll show you what I've done with Dapper to construct a complex graph of objects with bi-directional references.
In short, construct a Dictionary or KeyedCollection prior to calling connection.Query<>, then reference it inside the Dapper lambda expression.
This method returns a list of service calls. Each service call is assigned to one technician and one customer. However, a technician may be assigned multiple service calls to multiple customers. And a customer may have multiple technicians on-site.
public ServiceCallResponse GetServiceCallsDapper(ServiceCallRequest Request)
{
var queryParameters = new {statuses = Request.Statuses, createDate = Request.CreateDate};
const string splitOn = "Number,Id"; // Id indicates beginning of second class (Technician). Number indicates begining of third class (Customer).
// Note multiple columns are named "Number". See note below about how Dapper maps columns to class properties.
// Note Dapper supports parameterized queries to protect against SQL injection attacks, including parameterized "where in" clauses.
const string query = #"sql query here..."
ServiceCallResponse response = new ServiceCallResponse(); // Keyed collection properties created in constructor.
using (IDbConnection connection = new SqlConnection("DB connection string here..."))
{
connection.Open();
// Dapper adds a generic method, Query<>, to the IDbConnection interface.
// Query<(1)ServiceCall, (2)Technician, (3)Customer, (4)ServiceCall> means
// construct a (1)ServiceCall, (2)Technician, and (3)Customer class per row, add to an IEnumerable<(4)ServiceCall> collection, and return the collection.
// Query<TFirst, TSecond, TThird, TReturn> expects SQL columns to appear in the same order as the generic types.
// It maps columns to the first class, once it finds a column named "Id" it maps to the second class, etc.
// To split on a column other than "Id", specify a splitOn parameter.
// To split for more than two classes, specify a comma-delimited splitOn parameter.
response.ServiceCalls.AddRange(connection.Query<ServiceCall, Technician, Customer, ServiceCall>(query, (ServiceCall, Technician, Customer) =>
{
// Notice Dapper creates many objects that will be discarded immediately (Technician & Customer parameters to lambda expression).
// The lambda expression sets references to existing objects, so the Dapper-constructed objects will be garbage-collected.
// So this is the cost of using Dapper. We trade unnecessary object construction for simpler code (compared to constructing objects from IDataReader).
// Each row in query results represents a single service call.
// However, rows repeat technician and customer data through joined tables.
// Avoid constructing duplicate technician and customer classes.
// Refer to existing objects in global collections, or add Dapper-mapped objects to global collections.
// This avoid creating duplicate objects to represent same data.
// Newtonsoft JSON serializer preserves object instances from service to client.
Technician technician;
Customer customer;
if (response.Technicians.Contains(Technician.Id))
{
technician = response.Technicians[Technician.Id];
}
else
{
response.Technicians.Add(Technician);
technician = Technician;
}
if (response.Customers.Contains(Customer.Number))
{
customer = response.Customers[Customer.Number];
}
else
{
response.Customers.Add(Customer);
customer = Customer;
}
// Set object associations.
ServiceCall.Technician = technician;
ServiceCall.Customer = customer;
technician.ServiceCalls.Add(ServiceCall);
if (!technician.Customers.Contains(customer))
{
technician.Customers.Add(customer);
}
customer.ServiceCalls.Add(ServiceCall);
if (!customer.Technicians.Contains(technician))
{
customer.Technicians.Add(technician);
}
return ServiceCall;
}, queryParameters, splitOn: splitOn));
}
return response;
}
Using this technique requires you to set PreserveReferencesHandling = true on the JsonSerializer class so object references are preserved on the client-side. Otherwise, Json.NET will construct duplicate objects and technician.Customers.Count will always == 1.
For example, if John Doe is assigned a service call at Acme and another at Contoso, his technician.Customers.Count will equal 1 if you leave PreserveReferencesHandling == false (Json.NET will construct two Technician objects each named John Doe).
I am trying to retrieve a table with several columns and I have created a class that will be able to represent each row as an object with properties.
E.G.
class TableA {
int prop1;
int prop2;
....
}
I am using SqlDataReader to read the value for each row and then assigning it to the object that I have created
TableA tab = new TableA()
tab.prop1 = sqlreader.GetValue(prop1_ordinal).toString();
At the moment I need to explicitly state:
tab.prop1 = etc2..
tab.prop2 = etc2...
This can be quite troublesome when I have quite a few properties (20+ or so).
What other alternatives should I be using?
I am thinking of using a Dictionary or something of the sort but am not sure how to start. That way, I can just use a foreach loop to go through a list of all the properties and set the values.
Essentially, I don't want to put in too much redundant code just to set values.
After all the data has been put into the object, I will essentially write it to a CSV file after the values have been manipulated and changed.
Any thoughts will be appreciated?
Have you tried using linq to generate your table & schema:
[Table(Name = "Test")]
public class TableA
{
[Column(IsPrimaryKey = true)]
public int ID { get; set; }
[Column]
public int prop1 { get; set; }
[Column]
public int prop2 { get; set; }
}
static int main()
{
var constr = #" Data Source=NOTEBOOK\SQLEXPRESS;Initial Catalog=DemoDataContext;Integrated Security=True " ;
var context = new DataContext(constr) { Log = Console.Out };
var metaTable = context.Mapping.GetTable( typeof (TableA));
var typeName = " System.Data.Linq.SqlClient.SqlBuilder " ;
var type = typeof (DataContext).Assembly.GetType(typeName);
var bf = BindingFlags.Static | BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.InvokeMethod;
var sql = type.InvokeMember( " GetCreateTableCommand " , bf, null , null , new [] { metaTable });
Console.WriteLine(sql);
// Excute SQL Command
}
Make sure to include System.Data.Linq and:
using System.Data.Linq.Mapping;
using System.Data.Linq;
using System.Reflection;
You can find more information at:
https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/bb384396.aspx
Once you have everything mapped you can import the data into an object by using linq funcitonality to fill in objects for you !
And an example:
https://social.msdn.microsoft.com/Forums/en-US/2bdfdde6-596e-4880-a3b3-3cb3ec365245/could-i-use-linq-to-sql-create-table-in-my-database?forum=linqtosql
EntityFramework is an ORM (object relational mapper) designed for such a thing. It's perfect for an enterprise-level product, but it's pretty big and bulky if you have a smaller project. Dapper is a super-light-weight ORM that will essentially do the
tab.prop1 = sqlreader.GetValue(prop1_ordinal).toString();
part for you if you name the properties the same as the column names. You pull Dapper in with NuGet. The following code will give you an IEnumerable of your object (TModel).
IEnumerable<TModel> result;
using (MySqlConnection conn = new MySqlConnection(_mysqlConnString))
{
// "Query" is a Dapper extension method that stuffs the datareader into objects based on the column names
result = conn.Query<TModel>("Select * from YourTable");
}
// do stuff with result
This links to a full example, instead of just the piece I pulled out of my current project. http://www.tritac.com/bp-24-dapper-net-by-example
The problem you are describing is one of the main reasons we have Object Relational Mappers (ORM's). The easiest to use for Microsoft SQL Server is probably Linq2Sql, but Entity Framework allows you to use other database engines and will allow you to define more complicated relationships. Another solid ORM is NHibernate.
If you find EntityFramework to be big and bulky you could try Trinity Framework it's a small database first ORM framework with T4 templates and smart mapping to you database.
nugget: PM> Install-Package TrinityFramework
I've written this code to project one to many relation but it's not working:
using (var connection = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
{
connection.Open();
IEnumerable<Store> stores = connection.Query<Store, IEnumerable<Employee>, Store>
(#"Select Stores.Id as StoreId, Stores.Name,
Employees.Id as EmployeeId, Employees.FirstName,
Employees.LastName, Employees.StoreId
from Store Stores
INNER JOIN Employee Employees ON Stores.Id = Employees.StoreId",
(a, s) => { a.Employees = s; return a; },
splitOn: "EmployeeId");
foreach (var store in stores)
{
Console.WriteLine(store.Name);
}
}
Can anybody spot the mistake?
EDIT:
These are my entities:
public class Product
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public double Price { get; set; }
public IList<Store> Stores { get; set; }
public Product()
{
Stores = new List<Store>();
}
}
public class Store
{
public int Id { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<Product> Products { get; set; }
public IEnumerable<Employee> Employees { get; set; }
public Store()
{
Products = new List<Product>();
Employees = new List<Employee>();
}
}
EDIT:
I change the query to:
IEnumerable<Store> stores = connection.Query<Store, List<Employee>, Store>
(#"Select Stores.Id as StoreId ,Stores.Name,Employees.Id as EmployeeId,
Employees.FirstName,Employees.LastName,Employees.StoreId
from Store Stores INNER JOIN Employee Employees
ON Stores.Id = Employees.StoreId",
(a, s) => { a.Employees = s; return a; }, splitOn: "EmployeeId");
and I get rid of exceptions! However, Employees are not mapped at all. I am still not sure what problem it had with IEnumerable<Employee> in first query.
This post shows how to query a highly normalised SQL database, and map the result into a set of highly nested C# POCO objects.
Ingredients:
8 lines of C#.
Some reasonably simple SQL that uses some joins.
Two awesome libraries.
The insight that allowed me to solve this problem is to separate the MicroORM from mapping the result back to the POCO Entities. Thus, we use two separate libraries:
Dapper as the MicroORM.
Slapper.Automapper for mapping.
Essentially, we use Dapper to query the database, then use Slapper.Automapper to map the result straight into our POCOs.
Advantages
Simplicity. Its less than 8 lines of code. I find this a lot easier to understand, debug, and change.
Less code. A few lines of code is all Slapper.Automapper needs to handle anything you throw at it, even if we have a complex nested POCO (i.e. POCO contains List<MyClass1> which in turn contains List<MySubClass2>, etc).
Speed. Both of these libraries have an extraordinary amount of optimization and caching to make them run almost as fast as hand tuned ADO.NET queries.
Separation of concerns. We can change the MicroORM for a different one, and the mapping still works, and vice-versa.
Flexibility. Slapper.Automapper handles arbitrarily nested hierarchies, it isn't limited to a couple of levels of nesting. We can easily make rapid changes, and everything will still work.
Debugging. We can first see that the SQL query is working properly, then we can check that the SQL query result is properly mapped back to the target POCO Entities.
Ease of development in SQL. I find that creating flattened queries with inner joins to return flat results is much easier than creating multiple select statements, with stitching on the client side.
Optimized queries in SQL. In a highly normalized database, creating a flat query allows the SQL engine to apply advanced optimizations to the whole which would not normally be possible if many small individual queries were constructed and run.
Trust. Dapper is the back end for StackOverflow, and, well, Randy Burden is a bit of a superstar. Need I say any more?
Speed of development. I was able to do some extraordinarily complex queries, with many levels of nesting, and the dev time was quite low.
Fewer bugs. I wrote it once, it just worked, and this technique is now helping to power a FTSE company. There was so little code that there was no unexpected behavior.
Disadvantages
Scaling beyond 1,000,000 rows returned. Works well when returning < 100,000 rows. However, if we are bringing back >1,000,000 rows, in order to reduce the traffic between us and SQL server, we should not flatten it out using inner join (which brings back duplicates), we should instead use multiple select statements and stitch everything back together on the client side (see the other answers on this page).
This technique is query oriented. I haven't used this technique to write to the database, but I'm sure that Dapper is more than capable of doing this with some more extra work, as StackOverflow itself uses Dapper as its Data Access Layer (DAL).
Performance Testing
In my tests, Slapper.Automapper added a small overhead to the results returned by Dapper, which meant that it was still 10x faster than Entity Framework, and the combination is still pretty darn close to the theoretical maximum speed SQL + C# is capable of.
In most practical cases, most of the overhead would be in a less-than-optimum SQL query, and not with some mapping of the results on the C# side.
Performance Testing Results
Total number of iterations: 1000
Dapper by itself: 1.889 milliseconds per query, using 3 lines of code to return the dynamic.
Dapper + Slapper.Automapper: 2.463 milliseconds per query, using an additional 3 lines of code for the query + mapping from dynamic to POCO Entities.
Worked Example
In this example, we have list of Contacts, and each Contact can have one or more phone numbers.
POCO Entities
public class TestContact
{
public int ContactID { get; set; }
public string ContactName { get; set; }
public List<TestPhone> TestPhones { get; set; }
}
public class TestPhone
{
public int PhoneId { get; set; }
public int ContactID { get; set; } // foreign key
public string Number { get; set; }
}
SQL Table TestContact
SQL Table TestPhone
Note that this table has a foreign key ContactID which refers to the TestContact table (this corresponds to the List<TestPhone> in the POCO above).
SQL Which Produces Flat Result
In our SQL query, we use as many JOIN statements as we need to get all of the data we need, in a flat, denormalized form. Yes, this might produce duplicates in the output, but these duplicates will be eliminated automatically when we use Slapper.Automapper to automatically map the result of this query straight into our POCO object map.
USE [MyDatabase];
SELECT tc.[ContactID] as ContactID
,tc.[ContactName] as ContactName
,tp.[PhoneId] AS TestPhones_PhoneId
,tp.[ContactId] AS TestPhones_ContactId
,tp.[Number] AS TestPhones_Number
FROM TestContact tc
INNER JOIN TestPhone tp ON tc.ContactId = tp.ContactId
C# code
const string sql = #"SELECT tc.[ContactID] as ContactID
,tc.[ContactName] as ContactName
,tp.[PhoneId] AS TestPhones_PhoneId
,tp.[ContactId] AS TestPhones_ContactId
,tp.[Number] AS TestPhones_Number
FROM TestContact tc
INNER JOIN TestPhone tp ON tc.ContactId = tp.ContactId";
string connectionString = // -- Insert SQL connection string here.
using (var conn = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
{
conn.Open();
// Can set default database here with conn.ChangeDatabase(...)
{
// Step 1: Use Dapper to return the flat result as a Dynamic.
dynamic test = conn.Query<dynamic>(sql);
// Step 2: Use Slapper.Automapper for mapping to the POCO Entities.
// - IMPORTANT: Let Slapper.Automapper know how to do the mapping;
// let it know the primary key for each POCO.
// - Must also use underscore notation ("_") to name parameters in the SQL query;
// see Slapper.Automapper docs.
Slapper.AutoMapper.Configuration.AddIdentifiers(typeof(TestContact), new List<string> { "ContactID" });
Slapper.AutoMapper.Configuration.AddIdentifiers(typeof(TestPhone), new List<string> { "PhoneID" });
var testContact = (Slapper.AutoMapper.MapDynamic<TestContact>(test) as IEnumerable<TestContact>).ToList();
foreach (var c in testContact)
{
foreach (var p in c.TestPhones)
{
Console.Write("ContactName: {0}: Phone: {1}\n", c.ContactName, p.Number);
}
}
}
}
Output
POCO Entity Hierarchy
Looking in Visual Studio, We can see that Slapper.Automapper has properly populated our POCO Entities, i.e. we have a List<TestContact>, and each TestContact has a List<TestPhone>.
Notes
Both Dapper and Slapper.Automapper cache everything internally for speed. If you run into memory issues (very unlikely), ensure that you occasionally clear the cache for both of them.
Ensure that you name the columns coming back, using the underscore (_) notation to give Slapper.Automapper clues on how to map the result into the POCO Entities.
Ensure that you give Slapper.Automapper clues on the primary key for each POCO Entity (see the lines Slapper.AutoMapper.Configuration.AddIdentifiers). You can also use Attributes on the POCO for this. If you skip this step, then it could go wrong (in theory), as Slapper.Automapper would not know how to do the mapping properly.
Update 2015-06-14
Successfully applied this technique to a huge production database with over 40 normalized tables. It worked perfectly to map an advanced SQL query with over 16 inner join and left join into the proper POCO hierarchy (with 4 levels of nesting). The queries are blindingly fast, almost as fast as hand coding it in ADO.NET (it was typically 52 milliseconds for the query, and 50 milliseconds for the mapping from the flat result into the POCO hierarchy). This is really nothing revolutionary, but it sure beats Entity Framework for speed and ease of use, especially if all we are doing is running queries.
Update 2016-02-19
Code has been running flawlessly in production for 9 months. The latest version of Slapper.Automapper has all of the changes that I applied to fix the issue related to nulls being returned in the SQL query.
Update 2017-02-20
Code has been running flawlessly in production for 21 months, and has handled continuous queries from hundreds of users in a FTSE 250 company.
Slapper.Automapper is also great for mapping a .csv file straight into a list of POCOs. Read the .csv file into a list of IDictionary, then map it straight into the target list of POCOs. The only trick is that you have to add a propery int Id {get; set}, and make sure it's unique for every row (or else the automapper won't be able to distinguish between the rows).
Update 2019-01-29
Minor update to add more code comments.
See: https://github.com/SlapperAutoMapper/Slapper.AutoMapper
I wanted to keep it as simple as possible, my solution:
public List<ForumMessage> GetForumMessagesByParentId(int parentId)
{
var sql = #"
select d.id_data as Id, d.cd_group As GroupId, d.cd_user as UserId, d.tx_login As Login,
d.tx_title As Title, d.tx_message As [Message], d.tx_signature As [Signature], d.nm_views As Views, d.nm_replies As Replies,
d.dt_created As CreatedDate, d.dt_lastreply As LastReplyDate, d.dt_edited As EditedDate, d.tx_key As [Key]
from
t_data d
where d.cd_data = #DataId order by id_data asc;
select d.id_data As DataId, di.id_data_image As DataImageId, di.cd_image As ImageId, i.fl_local As IsLocal
from
t_data d
inner join T_data_image di on d.id_data = di.cd_data
inner join T_image i on di.cd_image = i.id_image
where d.id_data = #DataId and di.fl_deleted = 0 order by d.id_data asc;";
var mapper = _conn.QueryMultiple(sql, new { DataId = parentId });
var messages = mapper.Read<ForumMessage>().ToDictionary(k => k.Id, v => v);
var images = mapper.Read<ForumMessageImage>().ToList();
foreach(var imageGroup in images.GroupBy(g => g.DataId))
{
messages[imageGroup.Key].Images = imageGroup.ToList();
}
return messages.Values.ToList();
}
I still do one call to the database, and while i now execute 2 queries instead of one, the second query is using a INNER join instead of a less optimal LEFT join.
A slight modification of Andrew's answer that utilizes a Func to select the parent key instead of GetHashCode.
public static IEnumerable<TParent> QueryParentChild<TParent, TChild, TParentKey>(
this IDbConnection connection,
string sql,
Func<TParent, TParentKey> parentKeySelector,
Func<TParent, IList<TChild>> childSelector,
dynamic param = null, IDbTransaction transaction = null, bool buffered = true, string splitOn = "Id", int? commandTimeout = null, CommandType? commandType = null)
{
Dictionary<TParentKey, TParent> cache = new Dictionary<TParentKey, TParent>();
connection.Query<TParent, TChild, TParent>(
sql,
(parent, child) =>
{
if (!cache.ContainsKey(parentKeySelector(parent)))
{
cache.Add(parentKeySelector(parent), parent);
}
TParent cachedParent = cache[parentKeySelector(parent)];
IList<TChild> children = childSelector(cachedParent);
children.Add(child);
return cachedParent;
},
param as object, transaction, buffered, splitOn, commandTimeout, commandType);
return cache.Values;
}
Example usage
conn.QueryParentChild<Product, Store, int>("sql here", prod => prod.Id, prod => prod.Stores)
According to this answer there is no one to many mapping support built into Dapper.Net. Queries will always return one object per database row. There is an alternative solution included, though.
Here is another method:
Order (one) - OrderDetail (many)
using (var connection = new SqlCeConnection(connectionString))
{
var orderDictionary = new Dictionary<int, Order>();
var list = connection.Query<Order, OrderDetail, Order>(
sql,
(order, orderDetail) =>
{
Order orderEntry;
if (!orderDictionary.TryGetValue(order.OrderID, out orderEntry))
{
orderEntry = order;
orderEntry.OrderDetails = new List<OrderDetail>();
orderDictionary.Add(orderEntry.OrderID, orderEntry);
}
orderEntry.OrderDetails.Add(orderDetail);
return orderEntry;
},
splitOn: "OrderDetailID")
.Distinct()
.ToList();
}
Source: http://dapper-tutorial.net/result-multi-mapping#example---query-multi-mapping-one-to-many
Here is a crude workaround
public static IEnumerable<TOne> Query<TOne, TMany>(this IDbConnection cnn, string sql, Func<TOne, IList<TMany>> property, dynamic param = null, IDbTransaction transaction = null, bool buffered = true, string splitOn = "Id", int? commandTimeout = null, CommandType? commandType = null)
{
var cache = new Dictionary<int, TOne>();
cnn.Query<TOne, TMany, TOne>(sql, (one, many) =>
{
if (!cache.ContainsKey(one.GetHashCode()))
cache.Add(one.GetHashCode(), one);
var localOne = cache[one.GetHashCode()];
var list = property(localOne);
list.Add(many);
return localOne;
}, param as object, transaction, buffered, splitOn, commandTimeout, commandType);
return cache.Values;
}
its by no means the most efficient way, but it will get you up and running. I'll try and optimise this when i get a chance.
use it like this:
conn.Query<Product, Store>("sql here", prod => prod.Stores);
bear in mind your objects need to implement GetHashCode, perhaps like this:
public override int GetHashCode()
{
return this.Id.GetHashCode();
}