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Home/ Questions/Q 800089
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T23:14:13+00:00 2026-05-14T23:14:13+00:00

Is there a way to get the whole count when using the Take operator?

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Is there a way to get the whole count when using the Take operator?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T23:14:14+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 11:14 pm

    You can do both.

    IEnumerable<T> query = ...complicated query;
    int c = query.Count();
    query = query.Take(n);
    

    Just execute the count before the take. this will cause the query to be executed twice, but i believe that that is unavoidable.

    if this is in a Linq2SQL context, as your comment implies then this will in fact query the database twice. As far as lazy loading goes though it will depend on how the result of the query is actually used.

    For example: if you have two tables say Product and ProductVersion where each Product has multiple ProductVersions associated via a foreign key.

    if this is your query:

    var query = db.Products.Where(p => complicated condition).OrderBy(p => p.Name).ThenBy(...).Select(p => p);
    

    where you are just selecting Products but after executing the query:

    var results = query.ToList();//forces query execution
    results[0].ProductVersions;//<-- Lazy loading occurs
    

    if you reference any foreign key or related object that was not part of the original query then it will be lazy loaded in. In your case, the count will not cause any lazy loading because it is simply returning an int. but depending on what you actually do with the result of the Take() you may or may not have Lazy loading occur. Sometimes it can be difficult to tell if you have LazyLoading ocurring, to check you should log your queries using the DataContext.Log property.

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