I have this bit of code as an example, basically it spits out
p => p.fieldname.StartsWith("123")
But who would i expand on this to do something like this:
p => p.anotherentity.fieldname.StartsWith("123")
Here is a sample of the code i am have refactored for own needs:
string propertyName = "FirstName";
string methodName = "StartsWith";
string keyword = "123";
Type t = typeof (Person);
ParameterExpression paramExp = Expression.Parameter(t, "p");
// the parameter: p
MemberExpression memberExp = Expression.MakeMemberAccess(paramExp,
t.GetMember(propertyName).FirstOrDefault());
// part of the body: p.FirstName
MethodCallExpression callExp = Expression.Call(memberExp,
typeof (string).GetMethod(methodName,
new Type[] {typeof (string)}),
Expression.Constant(keyword));
// the body: p.FirstName.StartsWith("123")
Expression<Func<Person, bool>> whereExp = Expression.Lambda<Func<Person, bool>>(callExp, paramExp);
Expression<Func<Person, string>> selectExp = Expression.Lambda<Func<Person, string>>(memberExp, paramExp);
Console.WriteLine(whereExp); // p => p.FirstName.StartsWith("123")
Console.WriteLine(selectExp); // p => p.FirstName
To further explain let me show you what i would like to do:
public class Person
{
public string IdentityCode {get;set;}
public Loans Loans {get;set;}
}
public class Loans
{
public int Id {get;set;}
public Asset Assets {get;set;}
public Person person {get;set;}
}
public class Asset
{
public string SerialNumber {get;set;}
}
Then using an expression build something like this:
p => p.Loans.Asset.SerialNumber.StartsWith("123)
Or
p => p.Loans.Person.IdentityCode.StartsWith("123")
I’m not sure what you’re asking for, updating an expression or building one from scratch…
If you already have the existing, old expression and want to update it, it would be very easy to create a new one. The idea is to dig through the expression tree down to the expression you want to replace. Then update all parent expressions with the newly replaced one.
Otherwise to build up the expression tree:
Work it out from the beginning.
I’ll leave the last one as an exercise for you.