@LasseVKarlsen when did I become familiar enough with this stuff that reading his blog makes total sense and I understand the topics he's discussing? I'm not sure to be scared or not
@Joren I started to but I had some db integration work to work on, and decided that chatroom and staring at SQL was enough fun for one simultaneous session
yeah, I understand and follow the logic when I read those, but I've not tried writing that code in C# as I just do ASP.NET during the day and on the weekends, well, let's just say that I don't have the free weekends that I want. But I'm well able to follow along with what he discusses and I understand not just the why but the how
Hi everyone,
For reasons that don't make a lot of sense (Read: Not my decision) I need to keep a large number of rows, about ~90,000, in a DataTable and I do not have the option of using a database.
I need to be able to search the DataTable efficiently to find rows that match some basic criteri...
Not able to use LINQ. I'm using VS2010 and I believe that is .NET 4.0? I'm trying to find the version in VS2010; I grabbed VS only about a month ago if that is any indicator.
It has been requested that I do not. As I mentioned, that is not my decision and I think that it is a very poor decision. I've also been asked not to use LINQ. Nobody has explained to me the details of why.
Lol so typical of SO people to get hung on on questioning the questioner rather than solve the problem... Honestly, does it matter who asked Angelina not to use a database?
eh. might be overcomplicating the problem in the first place. If we are all talking about System.Data.DataTable, then it implements a LINQ free Select method already.
@entens yeah, but we were looking for ways to help her speed things up and be more efficient, and I have a feeling the maintenance programmers would do better with a more thorough foreach ;)
@LasseVKarlsen Not so polite, eh? If I were to count the times I've heard that sort of comment :(
Well, I'm sorry, but if you're given arbitrary limitations, like "Don't use LINQ", without justification and reason, then there really is no reason not to get a new job
It would be appreciated if we could just focus on the project. As I've already indicated, I'm not enjoying this either. Not every problem has seemingly arbitrary limitations like this, though, so let's just leave the nature of what my job 'is' or 'is not' out of the picture.
@Angelina yah but of course. So your options seem to be either DataTable.Select() (see the answer on your question) or to work with indexes/dictionaries and a foreach. Do you feel comfortable with those options?
Basically a complete answer would have to be "write your own in-memory database system that uses the DataTable as basic storage" ... that makes me very sad
The only relief being that the kind of queries you get is limited, so you don't have to implement everything
@LasseVKarlsen yeah, I've run across it a few times, it means "I'm scared of LINQ and I expect it to be a performance nightmare so I don't want to introduce it into our codebase"
1. Build sorted lists of the "stuff" I want to look up, I would pick this if I need to do ranged lookups, ie. X BETWEEN a AND b
2. Build dictionaries of key -> row (or list of rows)
If I were to wager on the reasoning behind the "No LINQ" limitation, I would gather it would be a fear that all "queries" would end up as "table scans"
@Lasse: How would you handle the slightly more complex queries (where x = 3 and y = 5). Lookup '3' in your x-dict, 5 in your y-dict, then loop over the results and cross-reference?
@Joren If I were forced to do this without a proper database, I would build a dictionary for X, and one for Y, do the lookup on both, and correlate the results
First I must find all rows that have the same value from Column1. Then, I have to search that subset of rows to find which ones have the desired value of 'x' in Column2. Finally, if there is only one row with 'x' in Column2, the job is done. If there is more than one row with value 'x' in Column2, I must select one of those rows at random.
@drachenstern I thought I remembered someone telling me that databases can do that kind of thing automatically nowadays based on usage stats and whatnot
@Angelina Here's a tip. Anytime you're given a dataset X, a criteria Y, and the request to simply "from all the rows from X that satisfies criteria Y, pick one at random", always go with the first you find
@drachenstern, that seems reasonable. Between your suggestion and the dictionaries idea - which would be best based on the information I just provided (rough high level description.)
@LasseVKarlsen, good idea.
Thank you all, by the way. This is very helpful and I appreciate it. :)
DataTable output = new DataTable; foreach (DataRow row in inputDataTable.Rows) { if (row.Column[0] == 2 && row.Column[1] == 2) output.Add(row); } is roughly good enough
@Angelina: So while we're not being completely serious anymore, couldn't you just out of spite implement all the LINQ query operators yourself and just call them by their Haskell names instead of the .NET names? ;)
Oh, Haskell. I've never had anyone ask me to write anything in Haskell. Apparently the comparative programming class I had at university was non-standard and we only looked at ALGOL-like languages; other offerings of the course had functional programming and so I've been kind of toying with the idea of writing something in Haskell or Lisp since then..
I think DataView is the one you're referring to, and you can go ahead and supply a "presorted" view to a DataTable so that the underlyings get picked up if changes are made
@Angelina Do you know what they meant by "No LINQ"? Did they mean only the LINQ syntax? Or the "loop through everything" part? Or the LINQ extension methods?
@Sres Probably because there's an existing Name property in the base class. You'll have to add it yourself with an extra 'new' keyword to implement it.
@LasseVKarlsen when I implement the interface on the UserControl, then use the smarttag to create all the functions, the Name function wasn't created, @Pete's tip on adding new sorted it though.
@LasseVKarlsen I managed to correctly guess he was using some tool to generate the code to implement the interface.
@LasseVKarlsen e.g. if you use VS's "Implement interface" command, it will skip properties/method already defined in your class' base class. (unless you do "Explicitly Implement Interface"
@Joren lol, I figured somebody would have an idea :p ... you guys are lurking in both places ;) ... @ReedCopsey I tried a ctrl-f5, so maybe it was caching issues on SE end and nothing to do with me?
I have a fork-join kind of flow where I run one Task on the thread pool, ContinueWith two tasks, one of which runs on the UI thread, the other on the thread pool, and then ContinueWhenAll on those to do a final bit of work on the UI thread. Is pretty readable and works fine, but I'm itching to try it with async/await to see how much it improves :P
I guess there won't be too much improvements in this case
Since I don't have any exceedingly complex flow control where a state machine would really come in handy
Weird: why would System.Windows.Forms.Form not let me override the Dispose method