In SQL, it’d be done as such:
SELECT * FROM Student
WHERE SchoolId IN
(SELECT id FROM School WHERE Name LIKE '%elementary%')
How do I implement this with LINQ? I’ve tried the following:
var list = context.Students.Where(x => context.Schools.Where(r => r.Name.Contains("elementary").Select(r => r.Id).Contains(x.SchoolId))
but it’s not giving me what I want, unfortunately…
I know it’s possible to retrieve all the Ids from the School table first, but I think it’d take a heavy toll on the performance. Preferably I’d like LINQ to SQL to handle everything; I can’t do this using vanilla SQL because I need stuff to be dynamic and currently LINQ is the best solution for me.
The code above is all for illustration purposes; what I’m doing is a tad different (but more or less the same). I really do need some help on this; if you need any more information just feel free to ask.
EDIT: My bad, I missed out a field. It works, but the results didn’t show up because I was missing that field… So sorry…
Something like this should work. The first use of Contains is on a string object to see if the string contains the substring “elementary”. The second use of Contains is on a list and checks to see if the first result list contains SchoolId.