I am trying to get data from database for Google charts in my program. I would like to create an array of anonymous type (var) instead of repeating my code over and over again:
public JsonResult GetChartData(int sID, int regionID)
{
var testPathOne = from p in _rep.GetMetricsData().GetLHDb().page_loads
where p.t_3id == sID && p.test_path_id == 1
select new { time = p.time, created_at = p.created_at };
var testPathTwo = from p in _rep.GetMetricsData().GetLHDb().page_loads
where p.t_3id == sID && p.test_path_id == 2
select new { time = p.time, created_at = p.created_at };
var tOne = testPathOne.ToArray();
var tTwo = testPathTwo.ToArray();
var name = new { test1 = tOne, test2 = tTwo };
return Json(name);
}
i know that i will need a for loop so i can go through all the test path id’s instead of hard coding them like this p.test_path_id == 1, but my question is how would i make this part dynamic var name = new { test1 = tOne, test2 = tTwo };
Edit:
I apologize, I would like to do something like this:
name is an array
for loop:
testPath = query
name.Add(testPath)
I hope that makes sense
The easiest solution in this particular case would be to just give a name to the class that is currently anonymous. While there are workarounds that you can use, when you need to start working really hard to use an anonymous type you probably shouldn’t be using it. It’s there to make certain tasks quicker and easier; if that isn’t happening then you are likely better off with a real class.
That solution would look something like this:
Having said all of that, it’s still possible.
If it’s really, really important that you have an array, and not a list, then you could call
ToArrayon myList at the very end. It’s important that you start out with a list, and only convert it to an array at the end because Arrays have a fixed size once they are created. You can mutate their contents, but you can’t make them bigger or smaller. A List on the other hand, is designed to mutate it’s size over time, so it can start out with 0 or 1 items and then add items over time, which is important for us in this particular context. (It’s actually useful quite often, which is why it is frequently useful to useListover arrays.)