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Home/ Questions/Q 6622877
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 25, 20262026-05-25T21:27:49+00:00 2026-05-25T21:27:49+00:00

This sort of thing: Dim MatchingValues() As Integer = {5, 6, 7} Return From

  • 0

This sort of thing:

Dim MatchingValues() As Integer = {5, 6, 7}
Return From e in context.entity
       Where MatchingValues.Contains(e.Id)

…works great. However, in my case, the values in MatchingValues are provided by the user. If none are provided, all rows ought to be returned. It would be wonderful if I could do this:

Return From e in context.entity
       Where (MatchingValues.Length = 0) OrElse (MatchingValues.Contains(e.Id))

Alas, the array length test cannot be converted to SQL. I could, of course, code this:

If MatchingValues.Length = 0 Then
   Return From e in context.entity
Else
   Return From e in context.entity
          Where MatchingValues.Contains(e.Id)
End If

This solution doesn’t scale well. My application needs to work with 5 such lists, which means I’d need to code 32 queries, one for every situation.

I could also fill MatchingValues with every existing value when the user doesn’t want to use the filter. However, there could be thousands of values in each of the five lists. Again, that’s not optimal.

There must be a better way. Ideas?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-25T21:27:50+00:00Added an answer on May 25, 2026 at 9:27 pm

    Give this a try: (Sorry for the C# code, but you get the idea)

    IQueryable<T> query = context.Entity;
    if (matchingValues.Length < 0) {
        query = query.Where(e => matchingValues.Contains(e.Id));
    }
    

    You could do this with the other lists aswell.

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