I don't know how you can make Entity Framework use the "real" LIKE operator, but a possible workaround would be to express a LIKE expression in terms of StartsWith
, Contains
and EndsWith
For instance :
LIKE 'a%' => StartsWith("a")
LIKE '%a' => EndsWith("a")
LIKE '%a%' => Contains("a")
LIKE 'a%b' => StartsWith("a") && EndsWith("b")
LIKE 'a%b%' => StartsWith("a") && Contains("b")
And so on...
Note that it isn't exactly equivalent to using LIKE in SQL : for instance LIKE '%abc%bcd%'
would result in Contains("abc") && Contains("bcd")
. This would match "abcd" even though the original LIKE condition wouldn't. But for most cases, it should be good enough.
Here's a sample implementation, using PredicateBuilder
and LinqKit to build expressions based on a LIKE pattern :
public static class ExpressionHelper
{
public static Expression<Func<T, bool>> StringLike<T>(Expression<Func<T, string>> selector, string pattern)
{
var predicate = PredicateBuilder.True<T>();
var parts = pattern.Split('%');
if (parts.Length == 1) // not '%' sign
{
predicate = predicate.And(s => selector.Compile()(s) == pattern);
}
else
{
for (int i = 0; i < parts.Length; i++)
{
string p = parts[i];
if (p.Length > 0)
{
if (i == 0)
{
predicate = predicate.And(s => selector.Compile()(s).StartsWith(p));
}
else if (i == parts.Length - 1)
{
predicate = predicate.And(s => selector.Compile()(s).EndsWith(p));
}
else
{
predicate = predicate.And(s => selector.Compile()(s).Contains(p));
}
}
}
}
return predicate;
}
}
And here's how you could use it :
var expr = ExpressionHelper.StringLike<YourClass>(x => x.Type, typeFilter);
query = query.AsExpandable().Where(expr.Compile());
I just tried it with a simple EF model, and it seems to work fine :)
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