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681

answers:

1

I don't know how I can do several union with a distinct.

When I use .Distinct with an IEqualityComparer an exception in threw :

LINQ to Entities does not recognize the method 'System.Linq.IQueryable'

My code is

var union = query.Union(query1).Union(query2);
union = union.Distinct(new EqualityComparerTransaction());
+1  A: 

LINQ to Entities does not support the overload of Distinct which takes an IEqualityComparer. When you think about it, it really can't, because LINQ to Entities queries will be converted to SQL, and you cannot convert an interface reference to SQL.

Therefore, you must either:

1. Use the overload of `Distinct` which does not take any compare, or
2.  Bring both lists into object space and do the `Distinct` in LINQ to Objects, like this:

var union = query.Union(query1).Union(query2);
union = union.AsEnumerable().Distinct(new EqualityComparerTransaction());

Naturally, the risk here is that you might bring too many records back from the DB server. You could also use both of these techniques in order to do a portion of the comparison on the server and another portion in object space.

Craig Stuntz
Thanks for your answers ! I think I'm going to use the both techniques.Like I used a server side paging , it's not simple ...
lu2vik