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where clause (C# Reference)

The where clause is used in a query expression to specify which elements from the data source will be returned in the query expression. It applies a Boolean condition (predicate) to each source element (referenced by the range variable) and returns those for which the specified condition is true. A single query expression may contain multiple where clauses and a single clause may contain multiple predicate subexpressions.

Example

In the following example, the where clause filters out all numbers except those that are less than five. If you remove the where clause, all numbers from the data source would be returned. The expression num < 5 is the predicate that is applied to each element.

class WhereSample
{
    static void Main()
    {   
        // Simple data source. Arrays support IEnumerable<T>. 
        int[] numbers = { 5, 4, 1, 3, 9, 8, 6, 7, 2, 0 };

        // Simple query with one predicate in where clause. 
        var queryLowNums =
            from num in numbers
            where num < 5
            select num;

        // Execute the query. 
        foreach (var s in queryLowNums)
        {
            Console.Write(s.ToString() + " ");
        }
    }
}
//Output: 4 1 3 2 0

Within a single where clause, you can specify as many predicates as necessary by using the && and || operators. In the following example, the query specifies two predicates in order to select only the even numbers that are less than five.

class WhereSample2
{
    static void Main()
    {
        // Data source. 
        int[] numbers = { 5, 4, 1, 3, 9, 8, 6, 7, 2, 0 };

        // Create the query with two predicates in where clause. 
        var queryLowNums2 =
            from num in numbers
            where num < 5 && num % 2 == 0
            select num;

        // Execute the query 
        foreach (var s in queryLowNums2)
        {
            Console.Write(s.ToString() + " ");
        }
        Console.WriteLine();

        // Create the query with two where clause. 
        var queryLowNums3 =
            from num in numbers
            where num < 5
            where num % 2 == 0
            select num;

        // Execute the query 
        foreach (var s in queryLowNums3)
        {
            Console.Write(s.ToString() + " ");
        }

    }
}
// Output:  
// 4 2 0 
// 4 2 0

A where clause may contain one or more methods that return Boolean values. In the following example, the where clause uses a method to determine whether the current value of the range variable is even or odd.

class WhereSample3
{       
    static void Main()
    {
        // Data source 
        int[] numbers = { 5, 4, 1, 3, 9, 8, 6, 7, 2, 0 };

        // Create the query with a method call in the where clause. 
        // Note: This won't work in LINQ to SQL unless you have a 
        // stored procedure that is mapped to a method by this name. 
        var queryEvenNums =
            from num in numbers
            where IsEven(num)
            select num;

         // Execute the query. 
        foreach (var s in queryEvenNums)
        {
            Console.Write(s.ToString() + " ");
        }
    }

    // Method may be instance method or static method. 
    static bool IsEven(int i)
    {
        return i % 2 == 0;
    }    
}
//Output: 4 8 6 2 0

Remarks

The where clause is a filtering mechanism. It can be positioned almost anywhere in a query expression, except it cannot be the first or last clause. A where clause may appear either before or after a group clause depending on whether you have to filter the source elements before or after they are grouped.

If a specified predicate is not valid for the elements in the data source, a compile-time error will result. This is one benefit of the strong type-checking provided by LINQ.

At compile time the where keyword is converted into a call to the Where Standard Query Operator method.

See Also

Reference

from clause (C# Reference)

select clause (C# Reference)

Concepts

Filtering Data

LINQ Query Expressions (C# Programming Guide)

Other Resources

Query Keywords (C# Reference)

Getting Started with LINQ in C#