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235

answers:

1

I start with a basic class that I want to manipulate in a List using LINQ, something like the following:

public class FooBar   
{  
    public virtual int Id { get; set; }  
    public virtual string Foo{ get; set; }  
    public virtual string Bar{ get; set; }
}

This is what I ultimately found out to solve my problem using the non lambda LINQ stuff.

// code somewhere else that works and gets the desired results  
var foobarList = GetFooBarList();  // Abstracted out - returns List<Foobar>  

// Interesting piece of code that I want to examine
var resultSet = from foobars in foobarList  
                orderby foobars.Foo, foobars.Bar  
                select foobars;

// Iterate and do something interesting  
foreach (var foobar in resultSet)  
{  
    // Do some code  
}

What I'm really curious about is if the same can be accomplished using the Lambda based extension methods off of generic IEnumerable to accomplish the same thing. Google tells me I can do something like the following to accomplish it

var resultSet = foobarList.OrderBy(x => new {x.Foo, x.Bar})  
                          .Select(x=>x);

However if I do that I get a runtime error when I hit the foreach statement. The error tells me that at least one object has to implement IComparible, which I can see that since I'm using an anonymous type for the .OrderBy() method.

So is there a way to accomplish what I want using the Lambda way?

+8  A: 

You can use the ThenBy and ThenByDescending extension methods:

foobarList.OrderBy(x => x.Foo).ThenBy( x => x.Bar)
Pop Catalin
Guess I should fully get through the API before asking the question ;) It also looks like you can chain .ThenBy() statements as many times as you need to. Thanks again!
sdanna