I've managed to resolve a similar problem by slightly adapting the original sql query. I've ended up with something like this (pseudo sql code):
SELECT p.* FROM [Items] as p
WHERE EXISTS
(
SELECT [childId] as childNodeId FROM [Items] as q
WHERE p.[childId] = q.[childNodeId]
GROUP BY q.[childId]
HAVING p.[price] = MAX(q.[price])
)
And this is the QueryOver implementation:
var subquery = QueryOver.Of(() => q)
.SelectList(list => list.SelectGroup(() => q.ChildId))
.Where(Restrictions.EqProperty(
Projections.Property(() => p.Price),
Projections.Max(() => q.Price)))
.And(Restrictions.EqProperty(
Projections.Property(() => p.ChildId),
Projections.Property(() => q.ChildId)));
From here you only need to pass the aliases so that NHibernate can resolve entities correctly (pseudo code):
var filter = QueryOver.Of(() => p)
.WithSubquery.WhereExists(GetSubQuery(p, criteria...));
I hope this helps in your particular case.
UPDATE: Criteria API
var subquery = DetachedCriteria.For<Items>("q")
.SetProjection(Projections.ProjectionList()
.Add(Projections.GroupProperty("q.ChildId")))
.Add(Restrictions.EqProperty("p.Price", Projections.Max("q.Price")))
.Add(Restrictions.EqProperty("p.ChildId", "q.ChildId"));
var query = DetachedCriteria.For<Items>("p")
.Add(Subqueries.Exists(subquery));
Nevertheless I would recommend sticking to the QueryOver
version, it's much more intuitive and you avoid magic strings (especially that you don't have to upgrade the NH version).
Please let me know if this is working for you.
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