Appendix J LINQ
This appendix provides syntax summaries for the most useful LINQ methods. For more detailed information, see Chapter 8, “LINQ.”
Basic LINQ Query Syntax
The following text shows the typical syntax for a LINQ query.
from ... where ... orderby ... select ...
The following sections describe these four standard clauses. The sections after those describe some of the other most useful LINQ clauses.
from
The from
clause tells where the data comes from and defines the name by which it is known within the LINQ query.
from queryVariable in dataSource
Examples:
var customerQuery =
from person in customers
select person;
var scoresQuery =
from student in students
from score in testScores
where student.StudentId == score.StudentId
select new {student, score};
Usually, if you select data from multiple sources, you will want to use a where
clause to join the results from the sources.
where
The where
clause applies filters to the records selected by the from
clause. The syntax follows.
where conditions
Use comparison operators (>
, <
, and ==
), logical operators (!
, |
, and &&
), object methods (ToString
and Length
), and functions to build complex conditions.
For example, the following query selects student and test score data, matching students to their test scores.
var scoresQuery =
from student in students
from score in testScores
where student.StudentId == score.StudentId
select new {student, score};
The following example selects students with last names starting with S.
var scoresQuery ...
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