I am doing a repeated query below, with ‘a’ and ‘b’ incrementing (‘b’ increments to a limit, then reset and ‘a’ increments). There may be multiple row with given values of ‘a’ and ‘b’.
struct MyData {int mdA; int mydB; }
....
int find_next_a(int a, int b)
{
var q = from p in db.pos
where (p.a >= a && p.b > b) || (p.a > a && p.b > 0)
orderby p.a, p.b
select new MyData
{
mdA = p.a,
mdB = p.b
};
return q.First().mdA; // ERROR: InvalidOperationException at end of data
}
The query works until I reach the end of the table. Then I get the exception InvalidOperationException. I can’t call q.Count() because I get the same exception.
How can I detect that q has no valid data in it?
[EDIT:]
Thanks Jon Skeet (and Bojan Skrchevski, Bodrick), I post the solution to above.
int find_next_a(int a, int b)
{
var q = from p in db.pos
where (p.a >= a && p.b > b) || (p.a > a && p.b > 0)
orderby p.a, p.b
select new { p.a, p.b };
var result = q.FirstOrDefault(); // catch running past end of table
if (result == null)
return -1;
return q.First().a; // return real data
}
You can use
FirstOrDefaultinstead:Note that there’s no way of telling between “a real result which is the default value for the element type” and “no results”… it’s not a problem here, as all your real results are non-null references, but it’s worth being aware of.
EDIT: I hadn’t noticed that you were using a custom struct; I’d misread it as an anonymous type. I’d strongly recommend using an anonymous type here instead of a mutable struct. Or, given that you only need
mdAanyway, you could use: