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Home/ Questions/Q 382839
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T15:13:29+00:00 2026-05-12T15:13:29+00:00

I need to have Where Linq functionality in my own code. Let me explain:

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I need to have “Where” Linq functionality in my own code.

Let me explain: we have an application that lets users write the so-called “user code”, which is code in C# that will be picked up by the app and compiled and run at runtime.

In user code, I need to be able to specify an SQL condition. A special case is the condition on a date column. We may have conditions like [DateColumn] = ‘1/1/2001’ which are easy to implement, but also [DateColumn] = GetDate() + 1. In the latter case I would need to implement an parser to “understand” the expression. I don’t want to blindly send to SQL whatever the user enters (avoid SQL injection).

The user would be most pleased to write a Linq-like query like this:

xxx.Where(field => field == new DateTime(2001, 1, 1));
xxx.Where(field => field == DateTime.Now.AddDays(1));

Is it possible to leverage the Linq to SQL framework in any way? I would need the SQL generated in the back to further construct the whole query and send it to SQL Server.

Are there any 3rd party tools that may help me?

I don’t require the whole IQueryable interfaces (to compose, join querys etc.). Only the ability to convert a System.Linq.Expressions.Expression to T-SQL (even with limitations).

What is the System.Linq.* namespace that exposes this conversion functionality for SQL? Maybe I can get a few hints with Reflector.

Thank you very much.

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T15:13:30+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 3:13 pm

    There is a Sample code in the SDK called dynamic linq.

    \CS 2008 Samples\LinqSamples\DynamicQuery

    You can do such things:

    Northwind db = new Northwind(connString); 
    db.Log = Console.Out;
    
    var query =
        db.Customers.Where("City == @0 and Orders.Count >= @1", "London", 10).
        OrderBy("CompanyName").
        Select("New(CompanyName as Name, Phone)");
    

    Another possibility is to implement a Custom Linq Provider. A very good example can be found at “THE WAYWARD WEBLOG” http://blogs.msdn.com/mattwar/pages/linq-links.aspx. This Blog helped me implementing my own custom Provider.

    public interface IQueryable : IEnumerable {       
        Type ElementType { get; }
        Expression Expression { get; }
        IQueryProvider Provider { get; }
    }
    
    public interface IQueryProvider {
        IQueryable CreateQuery(Expression expression);
        IQueryable<TElement> CreateQuery<TElement>(Expression expression);
        object Execute(Expression expression);
        TResult Execute<TResult>(Expression expression);
    }
    
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