How would the following query look if I was using the extension method syntax?
var query = from c in checks
group c by string.Format(\"{0} - {1}\", c.Custome
First, the basic answer:
var query = checks.GroupBy(delegate (Customer c) {
return string.Format("{0} - {1}", c.CustomerId, c.CustomerName);
}).Select(delegate (IGrouping customerGroups) {
return new { Customer = customerGroups.Key, Payments = customerGroups };
});
Then, how do you figure out these things yourself?
First, download Reflector from here, and install it.
Then build a sample program, like a smallish console program, containing the code you want to analyze. Here's the code I wrote:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
namespace ConsoleApplication11
{
public class Customer
{
public Int32 CustomerId;
public Int32 CustomerName;
}
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var checks = new List();
var query = from c in checks
group c by String.Format("{0} - {1}", c.CustomerId, c.CustomerName)
into customerGroups
select new { Customer = customerGroups.Key, Payments = customerGroups };
}
}
}
Then you build that, and open reflector, and ask it to open the .exe file in question.
Then you navigate to the method in question, which in my case was ConsoleApplication11.Program.Main
.
The trick here is to go to the options page of Reflector, and ask it to show C# 2.0 syntax, which will substitute Linq with the appropriate static method calls. Doing that gives me the following code:
private static void Main(string[] args)
{
List checks = new List();
var query = checks.GroupBy(delegate (Customer c) {
return string.Format("{0} - {1}", c.CustomerId, c.CustomerName);
}).Select(delegate (IGrouping customerGroups) {
return new { Customer = customerGroups.Key, Payments = customerGroups };
});
}
Now, of course this code can be written a bit prettier with lambdas and similar, like what @mquander showed, but with Reflector, at least you should be able to understand the method calls being involved.