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Start your free trialKirsty Pollock
14,261 PointsBrainbending
I have many many, many, many years of complex SQL, many , many of C#, and even a fair bit of LINQ ... and this is bending my brain.
I think I have worked out why - it's the "document" style data structure. I am not used to it - normalised relational data tables with unique keys and foreign keys have always been a breeze for me to deal with with LINQ. It just all fits. But this doesn't seem to. And I am not sure if there are slight bugs, or just I can't wrap my head round how one is intended to use LINQ with this style of data.
eg. here, the Sighting has a Bird property (not ideal compared to just a key) - but it is never populated on the data load making any joins much more horrible to achieve than they need be, IMO. (it also fails to populate Family - that IS a bug, but not one anyone would notice in this course).
If you are a beginner and find this hard - take courage, it is a mite confusing even to those who have spent the past 15 years wrangling data with C#. (and maybe try some SQL to see if the relational style of stuff makes more sense to you).
If you have the same sort of background as myself, and have managed the "brain flip" - any hints would be appreciated!
3 Answers
Carling Kirk
Treehouse Guest TeacherHi Kirsty!
It sounds like you are used to using a provider like LINQ to Entities or LINQ to SQL. This course uses "vanilla" LINQ to Objects on IEnumerable types. The goal is to get familiar with all the methods and to learn how delegates work.
It is a lot easier to use LINQ when you have a normalized data schema. Many of the joins we perform in this course are unnecessary when using normalized data - but it's good to know how to use them for when the need arises!
We'll use LINQ to Entities in an upcoming course on Entity Framework, and hopefully that will be more familiar for you!
okilydokily
12,105 PointsI'm somewhat familiar with functional programming concepts like map and filter and these linq functions are pretty analogous but I'm not learning anything linq specific in this course. I feel like I'm learning how to do this by rote rather than understanding anything that i'm doing. As a result I could follow along in this video but it was almost impossible for me to try out the solution before I was shown it.
Tim Uzzanti
11,775 Pointshi Carling Kirk, can you stop using the repl and actually write it out properly. i get that its faster to demonstrate what your saying by using the repl but for a newbie like my self it is very confusing, and very difficult to copy what your typing into VS. it scrolls past what you have typed, cannot be copied perfectly into VS since its not writen to actually be used in real code. and just isnt ideal for teaching someone new to this. i have had a lot of trouble with your teaching methods that i havent encountered with other teachers because you almost always use the repl vs just typing it out in the file. heres an example of the many many times i cant copy what your teaching
Conosle.WriteLine(birds.SelectMany(b => b.Sightings).GroupBy(s => s.Place.Country).Select(grp => {Country = grp.Key; Sightings = grp.Count() }));
i have errors everywhere on this line and since you didnt actually write it in the file those issues were never addressed.
also when you make a typo you have to move way past your old code just to start over which is ridiculous.
Luis Marsano
21,425 PointsHonestly, the query was needlessly complex: brains don't need to bend for this. A "filter, collect, transform" approach would have sufficed, been succinct, clearer, efficient.
- Filter out unwanted data.
- Group it.
- Transform the result.
birds
.Where(b => !( b.ConservationStatus == "LeastConcern"
|| b.ConservationStatus == "NearThreatened"
)
)
.GroupBy( b => b.ConservationStatus
, (c, bs) => new { ConservationStatus = c
, Sightings = bs.SelectMany(b => b.Sightings).Count()
}
);
Here, we filter out unwanted conservation statuses, group by conservation status, then transform each of those groups to the result we want.
Though we could look at intermediate results as we build this, I find the mess of data less helpful than clear expectations and a simple awareness of resulting types.
Filters (Where
) leave types alone.
Groupings (GroupBy
) map a sequence to a sequence of such sequences.
Transforms (Select
or extra parameter of GroupBy
) map a sequence to any type of sequence you want.
Functional programming should be clear and mostly self-explanatory. A programmer who comes up with complicated code for an idea that is not that complicated probably missed a simpler solution and should challenge themselves to find it.
Alan Brown
20,524 PointsJust adding my 20cents ;-) I’m drifting into back-end from front-end. I found the syntactic jumps in this exercise – and it is just an exercise – easy to follow. The code shared here as less complex does not look easier either. That said, I have a very flaky understanding of SQL. I think it might be that I’m used to JavaScript with its abundance of syntax.
Oziel Perez
61,321 PointsOziel Perez
61,321 PointsAgreed! I'm not a newb when it comes to SQL or OOP but I don't consider myself pro either. However, the querying in this course is grueling. If you are just getting started in programming, don't try to remember everything in this course. It's just not possible. The most important bits are the basics (select, order by, groups, where, and the aggregates). Look up joins or any other complex queries if the need arises. I don't often have to use queries like that in simple databases or websites that use them.