Declaring Func<in T, out Result> dynamically
Consider this:
var propertyinfo = typeof(Customer).GetProperty(sortExpressionStr);
Type orderType = propertyinfo.PropertyType;
now I want to declare
Func<int,orderType>
I know its not possible directly since ordertype
is at runtime but is there is any workaround ?
this is exactly what I want to do :
var propertyinfo = typeof(T).GetProperty(sortExpressionStr);
Type orderType = propertyinfo.PropertyType;
var param = Expression.Parameter(typeof(T), "x");
var sortExpression = (Expression.Lambda<Func<T, orderType>>
(Expression.Convert(Expression.Property(param, sortExpressionStr), typeof(orderType)), param));
all this because I want to convert:
Expression<Func<T,object>> to Expression<Func<T,orderType>>
or if its not possible then I want to create it from the first place with the right type , the case is as following:
I'm inside a method which have a type(Customer)
and a property name of that type I want to order by it , I开发者_JS百科 want to create a sort expression tree to pass it to Orderby
(here).
You can do this by using an open generic type definition, and then making the specific type from that:
typeof(Func<,>).MakeGenericType(typeof(int), orderType);
However, what you're trying to do (calling Lambda<TDelegate>
) is not directly possible. You must call Lambda
without a type parameter:
var propertyinfo = typeof(T).GetProperty(sortExpressionStr);
Type orderType = propertyinfo.PropertyType;
var param = Expression.Parameter(typeof(T), "x");
var sortExpression = Expression.Lambda(
Expression.Convert(Expression.Property(param, sortExpressionStr),
orderType),
param));
This will create the proper Func<,>
for you behind the scenes. If you want to compile the expression and use the delegate, you can only do this dynamically with
sortExpression.Compile().DynamicInvoke(param);
If you want to call the OrderBy
extension method on Queryable
, things get a little more complicated:
var propertyInfo = typeof(T).GetProperty(sortExpressionStr);
Type orderType = propertyInfo.PropertyType;
// first find the OrderBy method with no types specified
MethodInfo method = typeof(Queryable).GetMethods()
.Where(m => m.Name == "OrderBy" && m.GetParameters().Length == 2)
.Single();
// then make the right version by supplying the right types
MethodInfo concreteMethod = method.MakeGenericMethod(typeof(T), orderType);
var param = Expression.Parameter(typeof(T), "x");
// the key selector for the OrderBy method
Expression orderBy =
Expression.Lambda(
Expression.Property(orderParam, propertyInfo),
orderParam);
// how to use:
var sequence = new T[0].AsQueryable(); // sample IQueryable
// because no types are known in advance, we need to call Invoke
// through relection here
IQueryable result = (IQueryable) concreteMethod.Invoke(
null, // = static
new object[] { sequence, orderBy });
You can use the Type.MakeGenericType Method:
Type result = typeof(Func<,>).MakeGenericType(typeof(int), orderType);
This should work:
public static IQueryable<T> OrderByField<T>(
IQueryable<T> q, string sortfield, bool ascending)
{
var p = Expression.Parameter(typeof(T), "p");
var x = Expression.Lambda(Expression.Property(p, sortfield), p);
return q.Provider.CreateQuery<T>(
Expression.Call(typeof(Queryable),
ascending ? "OrderBy" : "OrderByDescending",
new Type[] { q.ElementType, x.Body.Type },
q.Expression,
x));
}
From here.
linqClass.OrderBy(GetSortExpression(sortstr));
public static Expression<Func<T,object>> GetSortExpression<T>(string sortExpressionStr)
{
var param = Expression.Parameter(typeof(T), "x");
var sortExpression = Expression.Lambda<Func<T, object>>(Expression.Property(param, sortExpressionStr), param);
return sortExpression;
}
this worked my problem was i used to pass extra parameter Typeof(Object) and orderby used to tell me it cant sort by Object type. thanks all
thanks dtb i will check if your answer work too and i will accept it if it works if not i will accept thsi one.
You want to use Dynamic Linq, a part of the Visual Studio sample code.
http://weblogs.asp.net/scottgu/archive/2008/01/07/dynamic-linq-part-1-using-the-linq-dynamic-query-library.aspx
See if my solution dynamic enough.
public class Product
{
public long ID { get; set; }
public string Name { get; set; }
public DateTime Date { get; set; }
}
static void Main(string[] args)
{
List<Product> products = (from i in Enumerable.Range(1, 10)
select new Product { ID = i, Name = "product " + i, Date = DateTime.Now.AddDays(-i) }).ToList(); //the test case
const string SortBy = "Date"; // to test you can change to "ID"/"Name"
Type sortType = typeof(Product).GetProperty(SortBy).PropertyType; // DateTime
ParameterExpression sortParamExp = Expression.Parameter(typeof(Product), "p"); // {p}
Expression sortBodyExp = Expression.PropertyOrField(sortParamExp, SortBy); // {p.DateTime}
LambdaExpression sortExp = Expression.Lambda(sortBodyExp, sortParamExp); // {p=>p.DateTime}
var OrderByMethod = typeof(Enumerable).GetMethods().Where(m => m.Name.Equals("OrderBy") && m.GetParameters().Count() == 2).FirstOrDefault().MakeGenericMethod(typeof(Product), sortType);
var result = OrderByMethod.Invoke(products, new object[] { products, sortExp.Compile() });
}
Base on above, it's not difficult to change Product
to T
to make it generic.
You can get the Type
associated with Func<int,orderType>
in case you wanted to e.g. pass it into CreateDelegate.
But what are you ultimately wanting to do with it? There may be a more straightforward approach.
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