Filter and Sort Data - .NET SDK
On this page
To query, filter, and sort data in a realm, use the Realm query engine. There are two ways to use the query engine with the .NET SDK:
You should use LINQ syntax for querying when possible, as it aligns with .NET conventions.
Note
About the examples on this page
The examples in this page use a simple data set for a
task list app. The two Realm object types are Project
and Task
. A Task
has a name, assignee's name, and
completed flag. There is also an arbitrary number for
priority -- higher is more important -- and a count of
minutes spent working on it. A Project
has zero or more
Tasks
.
See the schema for these two classes, Project
and
Task
, below:
public partial class Items : IRealmObject { [ ] [ ] public ObjectId Id { get; set; } = ObjectId.GenerateNewId(); public string Name { get; set; } public string Assignee { get; set; } public bool IsComplete { get; set; } public int Priority { get; set; } public int ProgressMinutes { get; set; } } public partial class Project : IRealmObject { [ ] [ ] public ObjectId ID { get; set; } = ObjectId.GenerateNewId(); public string Name { get; set; } public IList<Items> Items { get; } }
Query with LINQ
Realm's query engine implements standard LINQ syntax.
There are several operators available to filter a
Realm collection with LINQ.
Filters work by evaluating an operator expression for every object in the
collection being filtered. If the expression resolves to true
, realm
includes the object in the results collection.
An expression consists of one of the following:
The name of a property of the object currently being evaluated
An operator
A value of any type used by realm (string, date, number, boolean, etc.)
Note
The Realm .NET SDK does not currently support all of the LINQ operators. Refer to the Unsupported LINQ Operators section for a list of those unsupported operators.
Comparison Operators
Value comparisons
Operator | Description |
---|---|
== | Evaluates to true if the left-hand expression is equal to the
right-hand expression. |
> | Evaluates to true if the left-hand numerical or date expression is
greater than the right-hand numerical or date expression. For dates, this
evaluates to true if the left-hand date is later than the right-hand
date. |
>= | Evaluates to true if the left-hand numerical or date expression is
greater than or equal to the right-hand numerical or date expression. For
dates, this evaluates to true if the left-hand date is later than or
the same as the right-hand date. |
< | Evaluates to true if the left-hand numerical or date expression is
less than the right-hand numerical or date expression. For dates, this
evaluates to true if the left-hand date is earlier than the
right-hand date. |
<= | Evaluates to true if the left-hand numeric expression is less than
or equal to the right-hand numeric expression. For dates, this evaluates
to true if the left-hand date is earlier than or the same as the
right-hand date. |
!= | Evaluates to true if the left-hand expression is not equal to the
right-hand expression. |
Example
The following example uses the query engine's comparison operators to:
Find high priority tasks by comparing the value of the
priority
property value with a threshold number, above which priority can be considered high.Find just-started or short-running tasks by seeing if the
progressMinutes
property falls within a certain range.Find unassigned tasks by finding tasks where the
assignee
property is equal tonull
.Find tasks assigned to specific teammates Ali or Jamie by seeing if the
assignee
property is in a list of names.
var highPri = items.Where(i => i.Priority > 5); var quickItems = items.Where(i => i.ProgressMinutes >= 1 && i.ProgressMinutes < 15); var unassignedItems = items.Where(i => i.Assignee == null); var AliOrJamieItems = items.Where(i => i.Assignee == "Ali" || i.Assignee == "Jamie");
Logical Operators
You can use the logical operators listed in the following table to make compound predicates:
Operator | Description |
---|---|
&& | Evaluates to true if both left-hand and right-hand expressions are
true . |
! | Negates the result of the given expression. |
|| | Evaluates to true if either expression returns true . |
Example
We can use the query language's logical operators to find
all of Ali's completed tasks. That is, we find all tasks
where the assignee
property value is equal to 'Ali' AND
the isComplete
property value is true
:
var completedItemsForAli = items .Where(i => i.Assignee == "Ali" && i.IsComplete);
String Operators
You can compare string values using the string operators listed in the following table. Regex-like wildcards allow more flexibility in search.
Operator | Description |
---|---|
StartsWith | Evaluates to true if the left-hand string expression begins with the
right-hand string expression. This is similar to contains , but only
matches if the left-hand string expression is found at the beginning of
the right-hand string expression. |
EndsWith | Evaluates to true if the left-hand string expression ends with the
right-hand string expression. This is similar to contains , but only
matches if the left-hand string expression is found at the very end of
the right-hand string expression. |
Like | Evaluates to
For example, the wildcard string "d?g" matches "dog", "dig", and "dug", but not "ding", "dg", or "a dog". |
Equals | Evaluates to true if the left-hand string is
lexicographically
equal to the right-hand string. |
Contains | Evaluates to true if the left-hand string expression is found anywhere
in the right-hand string expression. |
string.IsNullOrEmpty | Evaluates to true if the left-hand string expression is null or empty.
Note that IsNullOrEmpty() is a static method on string . |
Example
The following examples use the query engine's string operators to find tasks:
// Note: In each of the following examples, you can replace the // Where() method with First(), FirstOrDefault(), // Single(), SingleOrDefault(), // Last(), or LastOrDefault(). // Get all items where the Assignee's name starts with "E" or "e" var ItemssStartWithE = items.Where(i => i.Assignee.StartsWith("E", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase)); // Get all items where the Assignee's name ends wth "is" // (lower case only) var endsWith = items.Where(t => t.Assignee.EndsWith("is", StringComparison.Ordinal)); // Get all items where the Assignee's name contains the // letters "ami" in any casing var itemsContains = items.Where(i => i.Assignee.Contains("ami", StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase)); // Get all items that have no assignee var null_or_empty = items.Where(i => string.IsNullOrEmpty(i.Assignee));
Important
Case Comparisons
When evaluating strings, the second parameter in all functions except Like
must be either StringComparison.OrdinalIgnoreCase
or
StringComparison.Ordinal
. For the Like()
method, the second
parameter is a boolean value (where "true" means "case sensitive").
Full Text Search
You can use LINQ to query on properties that have Full-Text Search Indexes (FTS) on
them. To query these properties, use QueryMethods.FullTextSearch.
The following examples query the Person.Biography
field:
// Find all people with "scientist" and "Nobel" in their biography var scientists = realm.All<Person>() .Where(p => QueryMethods.FullTextSearch(p.Biography, "scientist Nobel")); // Find all people with "scientist" in their biography, but not "physics" var scientistsButNotPhysicists = realm.All<Person>() .Where(p => QueryMethods.FullTextSearch(p.Biography, "scientist -physics"));
Unsupported LINQ Operators
The following LINQ operators are not currently supported by the Realm .NET SDK:
Category | Unsupported Operators |
---|---|
Concatenation |
|
Grouping |
|
Partitioning |
|
Projection |
|
Sets |
|
Query with Realm Query Language
You can also use the Realm Query Language (RQL) to query realms. RQL is a string-based query language used to access the query engine. When using RQL, you use the Filter() method:
var elvisProjects = projects.Filter("Items.Assignee == $0", "Elvis");
Important
Because LINQ provides compile-time error checking of queries, you should use it instead of RQL in most cases. If you require features beyond LINQ's current capabilities, such as using aggregation, use RQL.
Aggregate Operators
Aggregate operators traverse a
collection and reduce it
to a single value. Note that aggregations use the
Filter()
method, which can be used to create more complex queries that are currently
unsupported by the LINQ provider. Filter()
supports SORT and DISTINCT
clauses in addition to filtering.
For more information on the available aggregate operators, refer to the Realm Query Language aggregate operator reference.
The following examples show different ways to aggregate data:
// Get all projects with an average Item priorty > 5: var avgPriority = projects.Filter( "Items.@avg.Priority > $0", 5); // Get all projects where all Items are high-priority: var highPriProjects = projects.Filter( "Items.@min.Priority > $0", 5); // Get all projects with long-running Items: var longRunningProjects = projects.Filter( "Items.@sum.ProgressMinutes > $0", 100);
Full Text Search
You can use RQL to query on properties that have Full-Text Search Indexes (FTS) on
them. To query these properties, use the TEXT
operator. The following example
queries the Person.Biography
field:
// Find all people with "scientist" and "Nobel" in their biography var filteredScientists = realm.All<Person>() .Filter("Biography TEXT $0", "scientist Nobel"); // Find all people with "scientist" in their biography, but not "physics" var filteredScientistsButNotPhysicists = realm.All<Person>() .Filter("Biography TEXT $0", "scientist -physics");
Sort Query Results
A sort operation allows you to configure the order in which Realm returns queried objects. You can sort based on one or more properties of the objects in the results collection.
Realm only guarantees a consistent order of results when the results are sorted.
Example
The following code sorts the projects by name in reverse alphabetical order (i.e. "descending" order).
var projectsSorted = projects.OrderByDescending(p => p.Name);