A critical vulnerability was discovered in React Server Components (Next.js). Our systems remain protected but we advise to update packages to newest version. Learn More


Aug 4, 2009
  12332
(0 votes)

Globalization, categories and sorting using LINQ

I have been working with a globalized website for some time and have a couple of tips to share regarding globalization.

I’m using FindPagesWithCriteria to get pages based on categories defined on pages. As we teach during the EPiServer developer course FindPagesWithCriteria uses queries directly to the database. The method has got a performance boost in EPiServer CMS5, but should never be used on a typical landing page without caching.

Categories are quite useful if you do not need the complete Topic Maps structure. Anders Hattestad has written a nice post on how to create a custom property to display a part of the categorytree.

Well, back to the topic. Using FindPagesWithCriteria will not return the pages as they are displayed in editmode with fallback and replacement languages (which I hopefully thought). After some testing I found that the best way to get the pages I needed was to use LanguageSelector.AutoDetect(true) as the last parameter.

   1: PageDataCollection pages = 
   2: DataFactory.Instance.FindPagesWithCriteria(searchFrom, crits, 
   3: language, LanguageSelector.AutoDetect(true));

The pages collection will now also contain pages not translated to the current language. So, with a little help from reflector I removed the unwanted pages like this.

   1: public static PageDataCollection FilterForFallbackLanguages(PageReference pageLink, string languageBranch, PageDataCollection result )
   2:        {
   3:            PageLanguageSetting setting = PageLanguageSettingsTree.Instance.Get(pageLink, languageBranch);
   4:  
   5:            if (setting != null)
   6:            {
   7:                List<string> fallback = new List<string>(setting.LanguageBranchFallback);
   8:  
   9:                for (int i = result.Count - 1; i >= 0; i--)
  10:                {
  11:                    if (result[i].LanguageBranch != setting.LanguageBranch && fallback.Contains(result[i].LanguageBranch) == false)
  12:                        result.RemoveAt(i);
  13:                }         
  14:            }
  15:  
  16:            return result;
  17:  
  18:        }

Then my collection was complete. The last step was to sort the collection so the pages of the origin language – Norwegian – came first in the list and the fallback language – English - at the bottom of the list. In addition the sorting inside the language should be PageName. I could write my own comparer or my own filter but a better, and much easier solution, is to use LINQ (thanks Ahsan at support who suggested this solution to a partner in a post I came across while surfing around).

   1: var sorted = from page in pages
   2: orderby page.LanguageID descending, page.PageName ascending 
   3: select page;
   4:  
   5: pageList.DataSource = sorted;
   6: pageList.DataBind();

To get this to work I needed to change the webcontrol which render this list from EPiServer:PageList to Asp:Repeater. EPiServer:PageList do not support this and you will get an error like this if you try.

System.NotSupportedException: Specified method is not supported.

After changing the webcontrol from EPiServer:PageList to Asp:Repeater, remember to use the FilterForVisitor.Filter(pages); to set the right security and remove the unpublished pages.

 

Globalization is cool, it works like a charm in most cases, but be aware of that the time used to develop could take a little longer than you think. Perhaps more important – put some effort when testing the site after the content is in place and real fallback and replacement language is set.

Aug 04, 2009

Comments

Please login to comment.
Latest blogs
A day in the life of an Optimizely OMVP: Learning Optimizely Just Got Easier: Introducing the Optimizely Learning Centre

On the back of my last post about the Opti Graph Learning Centre, I am now happy to announce a revamped interactive learning platform that makes...

Graham Carr | Jan 31, 2026

Scheduled job for deleting content types and all related content

In my previous blog post which was about getting an overview of your sites content https://world.optimizely.com/blogs/Per-Nergard/Dates/2026/1/sche...

Per Nergård (MVP) | Jan 30, 2026

Working With Applications in Optimizely CMS 13

💡 Note:  The following content has been written based on Optimizely CMS 13 Preview 2 and may not accurately reflect the final release version. As...

Mark Stott | Jan 30, 2026

Experimentation at Speed Using Optimizely Opal and Web Experimentation

If you are working in experimentation, you will know that speed matters. The quicker you can go from idea to implementation, the faster you can...

Minesh Shah (Netcel) | Jan 30, 2026