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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T21:22:04+00:00 2026-05-13T21:22:04+00:00

I have the following code that fills dataTable1 and dataTable2 with two simple SQL

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I have the following code that fills dataTable1 and dataTable2 with two simple SQL queries, dataTableSqlJoined is filled from the same tables but joined together.

I’m trying to write a LINQ query that can create the dataTableLinqJoined as if it had been created using SQL. In my example below, it only returns the values from dataTable1.

The problem I have is what to put in the SELECT of the linq query. How can I create a new DataRow containing all the Columns from both DataRows. I will not know the exact column names / schema of the queries until runtime.

sqlCommand = new SqlCommand("SELECT ID, A, B FROM Table1", sqlConnection, sqlTransaction);
sqlAdapter = new SqlDataAdapter(sqlCommand);
DataTable dataTable1 = new DataTable();
sqlAdapter.Fill(dataTable1);

sqlCommand = new SqlCommand("SELECT ID, C, D FROM Table2", sqlConnection, sqlTransaction);
sqlAdapter = new SqlDataAdapter(sqlCommand);
DataTable dataTable2 = new DataTable();
sqlAdapter.Fill(dataTable2);

sqlCommand = new SqlCommand("SELECT Table1.ID, A, B, Table2.ID, C, D FROM Table1 INNER JOIN Table2 ON Table1.ID = Table2.ID", sqlConnection, sqlTransaction);
sqlAdapter = new SqlDataAdapter(sqlCommand);
DataTable dataTableSqlJoined = new DataTable();
sqlAdapter.Fill(dataTableSqlJoined);

var dataRows =
    from
        dataRows1 in dataTable1.AsEnumerable()
    join
        dataRows2 in dataTable2.AsEnumerable()
    on
        dataRows1.Field<int>("ID") equals dataRows2.Field<int>("ID")
    select
        dataRows1; // + dataRows2;

DataTable dataTableLinqJoined = dataRows.CopyToDataTable();

For a bit more background, the combined query is very DB intensive and is causing performance issues. The data returned by the first query is fairly static and can be heavily cached. The data returned by the second query changes constantly but is fast to run and therefore doesn’t need to be cached. There is also a lot of code reliant upon the passing of the combined DataTable and therefore there are not many feasible options available in passing the data in a different format.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T21:22:05+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 9:22 pm

    Have you looked at this page yet?

    HOW TO: Implement a DataSet JOIN helper class in Visual C# .NET

    If that approach isn’t LINQy enough for you, you could break out the row data into object arrays:

    DataTable targetTable = dataTable1.Clone();
    var dt2Columns = dataTable2.Columns.OfType<DataColumn>().Select(dc => 
        new DataColumn(dc.ColumnName, dc.DataType, dc.Expression, dc.ColumnMapping));
    targetTable.Columns.AddRange(dt2Columns.ToArray());
    var rowData =
        from row1 in dataTable1.AsEnumerable()
        join row2 in dataTable2.AsEnumerable()
            on row1.Field<int>("ID") equals row2.Field<int>("ID")
        select row1.ItemArray.Concat(row2.ItemArray).ToArray();
    foreach (object[] values in rowData)
        targetTable.Rows.Add(values);
    

    I think that’s about as terse as you’re going to be able to make it and I’ll explain why: it’s the schema.

    A DataRow is not an independent object; it depends on its owning DataTable and cannot live without it. There is no supported way to create a “disconnected” DataRow; the CopyToDataTable() extension method works on rows that already exist in one DataTable and simply copy the schema from the source (remember, every DataRow has a reference to its parent Table) before copying the rows themselves (most likely using ImportRow, though I haven’t actually opened up Reflector to check).

    In this case you have a new schema that you need to create. Before you can create any (new) rows, you need to create the table to hold them first, and that means writing at least the 3 lines of code at the top of the method above.

    Then you can finally create the rows – but only one at a time, since the DataTable and its associated DataRowCollection don’t expose any methods to add multiple rows at a time. You could, of course, add your own extension method for the DataRowCollection to make this “look” nicer:

    public static void AddRange(this DataRowCollection rc,
        IEnumerable<object[]> tuples)
    {
        foreach (object[] data in tuples)
            rc.Add(tuples);
    }
    

    Then you could get rid of the foreach in the first method and replace it with:

    targetTable.Rows.AddRange(rowData);
    

    Although that’s really just moving the verbosity, not eliminating it.

    Bottom line, as long as you’re working with the legacy DataSet class hierarchy, there’s always going to be a little cruft. The Linq to DataSet extensions are nice, but they are only extensions and can’t alter the limitations above.

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