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Home/ Questions/Q 1019793
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T11:04:06+00:00 2026-05-16T11:04:06+00:00

I have a fairly complicated join query that I use with my database. Upon

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I have a fairly complicated join query that I use with my database. Upon running it I end up with results that contain an baseID and a bunch of other fields. I then want to take this baseID and determine how many times it occurs in a table like this:

TableToBeCounted (One to Many)
{
     baseID,
     childID
}

How do I perform a linq query that still uses the query I already have and then JOINs the count() with the baseID?

Something like this in untested linq code:

from k in db.Kingdom
join p in db.Phylum on k.KingdomID equals p.KingdomID
where p.PhylumID == "Something"
join c in db.Class on p.PhylumID equals c.PhylumID
select new {c.ClassID, c.Name};

I then want to take that code and count how many orders are nested within each class. I then want to append a column using linq so that my final select looks like this:

select new {c.ClassID, c.Name, o.Count()}//Or something like that.

The entire example is based upon the Biological Classification system.

Assume for the example that I have multiple tables:

Kingdom
|--Phylum
    |--Class
       |--Order

Each Phylum has a Phylum ID and a Kingdom ID. Meaning that all phylum are a subset of a kingdom. All Orders are subsets of a Class ID. I want to count how many Orders below to each class.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T11:04:06+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 11:04 am
    select new {c.ClassID, c.Name, (from o in orders where o.classId == c.ClassId select o).Count()}
    

    Is this possible for you? Best I can do without knowing more of the arch.

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