Easy, just select the property you need from the list:
var items = new List<Item>();
//get names
var names = items.Select(x => x.Name);
//get descriptions
var descriptions = items.Select(x => x.Description);
Update:
You'll need a bit of reflection to do this:
var names = items.Select(x => x.GetType().GetProperty("Name").GetValue(x));
Throw this in a method for re-usability:
public IEnumerable<object> GetColumn(List<Item> items, string columnName)
{
var values = items.Select(x => x.GetType().GetProperty(columnName).GetValue(x));
return values;
}
Of course this doesn't validate wether the column exists in the object. So it will throw a NullReferenceException
when it doesn't. It returns an IEnumerable<object>
, so you'll have to call ToString()
on each object afterwards to get the value or call the ToString()
in the query right after GetValue(x)
:
public IEnumerable<string> GetColumn(List<Item> items, string columnName)
{
var values = items.Select(x => x.GetType().GetProperty(columnName).GetValue(x).ToString());
return values;
}
Usage:
var items = new List<Item>(); //fill it up
var result = GetColumn(items, "Name");
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