Pro LINQ Object Relational Mapping in C# 2008 / Edition 1
by Vijay P. Mehta
It is nearly impossible today to write enterprise software without the use of one or more relational databases. Granted, there are cases when the data is transient and not stored in a database, but for the most part, software needs to consume and manipulate data in a database. It sounds easy, but there are hundreds of ways to connect software systems to databases
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It is nearly impossible today to write enterprise software without the use of one or more relational databases. Granted, there are cases when the data is transient and not stored in a database, but for the most part, software needs to consume and manipulate data in a database. It sounds easy, but there are hundreds of ways to connect software systems to databases and thousands of people who think they have the skeleton key for data access layers. Pro LINQ Object Relational Mapping in C# 2008 explains an efficient, repeatable way to apply industry design patterns to build scalable objectoriented data access layers.
Object relational mapping (OR/M) has been a gray area in Microsoft development for many years. It’s not that Microsoft language developers don’t understand OR/M; in fact, the opposite is true, as is exemplified by the glut of thirdparty .NET OR/M tools on the market. The struggle has come more from the lack of native tools with the objectoriented and object persistence capacity to effectively work in this arena. With the inception of .NET, Microsoft overcame the first obstacle by developing an objectoriented environment and framework. The second obstacle, the native object persistence layer, is only now being realized with the introduction of Language Integrated Query (LINQ) and LINQ’s children, the Language Integrated Query for Relational Databases (LINQ to SQL) and the Language Integrated Query for the ADO.NET Entity Framework (LINQ to Entities). The gray area no longer exists, and the .NET developers of the world finally have the native tools required to build modular, reusable data access layers.
What you’ll learn
- The powerful advantages that OR/M can bring to your code
- The native tools that are now available within Visual Studio 2008 for OR/M
- How to build scalable objectoriented data access layers that take advantage of OR/M’s flexibility
- How LINQ fits into this picture, together with the advantages and disadvantages that it can bring
- How the concepts work in the real world by examining a fully worked and detailed case study, created with an architecture than can be easily applied to a wide range of other situations
Who this book is for
This book is intended for Microsoft .NET developers who are using or evaluating Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 to build dataaware applications, and it will provide patterns and resources that can be used to build enterprise class software.
Product Details
- ISBN-13:
- 9781590599655
- Publisher:
- Apress
- Publication date:
- 07/07/2008
- Series:
- The Expert's Voice in .NET Series
- Pages:
- 408
- Product dimensions:
- 7.00(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.00(d)
Table of Contents
Pt. 1 Object-Relational Mapping Concepts
Ch. 1 Getting Started with Object-Relational Mapping 3
Ch. 2 ORM Patterns and Domain-Driven Design 17
Pt. 2 LINQ to SQL Examined
Ch. 3 Introduction to LINQ to SQL 47
Ch. 4 Advanced LINQ to SQL 79
Pt. 3 Entity Framework Examined
Ch. 5 Getting Started with the ADO.NET Entity Framework 113
Ch. 6 Using the ADO.NET Entity Framework 147
Ch. 7 Advanced ADO.NET Entity Framework 177
Pt. 4 The Bank of Pluto Case Study
Ch. 8 A Domain Model for the First Bank of Pluto 209
Ch. 9 Mapping the FBP 243
Ch. 10 Mapping the Bank of Pluto with the ADO.NET Entity Framework 277
Pt. 5 Building on the Bank of Pluto Foundation
Ch. 11 N-Tier Architecture 311
Ch. 12 LINQ to SOL, the Entity Framework, and Your Other Options 347
Index 365
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