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RickZeeland wrote: Clearly this is not an ORM to use if you are in a hurry due to it's complexity
Kind of contradicting the purpose, isn't it?
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I have to agree, an ORM should make things easier for developers, but on the positive side it can make things easier once you understand how it works, a pity the learning curve is so damn steep
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RickZeeland wrote: an ORM should make things easier for developers
RickZeeland wrote: pity the learning curve is so damn steep
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contradictio in terminis, haha
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Linq2SQLalso, because as you say it just works.
I also hate EF, it's a complicated POS and if you want to do anything out of the, what they obviously consider normal, you will have bend nails with your teeth to get it to work.
Everyone has a photographic memory; some just don't have film. Steven Wright
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Yupper.
One thing I hate... We generate entities into another project in the solution, and the whole shebang is under source control.
So if you first don't check out ALL the entities in the generation location, it fails to generate with read only errors. So what we've all done is select all in Windows Explorer and make everything read-write.
If it's not broken, fix it until it is.
Everything makes sense in someone's mind.
Ya can't fix stupid.
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EF for CRUD. (Not by my choice though)
Everything else is homegrown.
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I am currently developing my own ORM. I've already completed work on all the key components such as building the database and a (sorta) simple codebase to build applications with it. I've even written a security layer. Once I've got the workflow engine sorted out, I am going to have to find a real world problem to throw it at.
I have to thank the folks at Microsoft who built the engine for Operations Manager. After poking around under it's hood for a while, I got the idea to build this little monster. It's a software library that manages it all. With it, I managed to build a password protected file sharing website in a week.
if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }
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I spy with my little eye: a new series of articles coming up
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Ha, and get skewered some more for my abuse of the Reflection namespace, I think not. All joking aside, I don't know if any of what I am working on can be considered proprietary yet but I do like to be able to build a whole new database for a specific set of data in less than half-an-hour.
I can also write code like this to work with it:
DataObject dObj = dataAccess.Objects.GetDataObject("4e813bca-8fb0-448e-8f01-d714bd8132a3");
dObj["AnIntegerProperty"].SetValue(42);
dObj.Update(TransactionContext.Current); This code fetches a specific record from a database and then pushes an updated value complete with transaction logging.
if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }
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dObj["AnIntegerProperty"].SetValue(42);
Not suggesting premature optimization, but if this SetValue ends up causing any bottlenecks you can do the following which works for properties but not fields because of how the values are set internally:
class PropertyInfoWrapper
{
private Action<object, object> _setValueDelegate;
public PropertyInfoWrapper(PropertyInfo property)
{
MethodInfo delegateHelper = typeof(PropertyInfoWrapper).GetTypeInfo()
.GetMethod(nameof(this.CreateDelegate), BindingFlags.Instance | BindingFlags.NonPublic)
.MakeGenericMethod(property.DeclaringType, property.PropertyType);
_setValueDelegate = (Action<object, object>)delegateHelper.Invoke(
this,
new object[] { property.SetMethod });
}
private Action<object, object> CreateDelegate<TObject, TProp>(MethodInfo method)
{
var del = (Action<TObject, TProp>)method.CreateDelegate(typeof(Action<TObject, TProp>));
return (object obj, object val) => { del((TObject)obj, (TProp)val); };
}
public void SetValue(object container, object value) =>
_setValueDelegate(container, value);
}
I've been debating on whether to do an article about my RegexContainer[^] project for a similar reason (where this example is from). There's a lot of dislike for reflection even when it's useful.
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The internals aren't really all that complex. The DataObject class only contains a collection of "Properties" that validate their own values when you try to set them. The real bottlenecks are database calls so I can build a little overhead into the classes without any real loss in performance.
Jon McKee wrote: There's a lot of dislike for reflection even when it's useful. I don't get this either. With Reflection, you could, in theory, write deep learning algorithms that self-optimize their own code. I approach Reflection like I do C++ code. Since both give you enough rope to hang yourself, you must weight your options and use it when your program benefits from its use or it's absolutely necessary to reach your goal.
if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }
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Good luck with this. I agree it is the best way not to depend on a library which change completely (enough) after some months
It does not solve my Problem, but it answers my question
modified 19-Jan-21 21:04pm.
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While the Entity Framework is great and all, the one thing that really pushed me away from it is how it never optimizes the tables. I was mentored by one of the last few people who earned their SQL Server Master's Certification and he always told me that how you structure your table can have a equal if not bigger performance impact than how you write your queries. It makes perfect sense when you think about if from a database engine point of view. What's the point of simplifying development if your data lives in performance sucking tables.
if (Object.DividedByZero == true) { Universe.Implode(); }
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Is LINQ to SQL actively developed/maintained today?
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Not using one...does that count? I'd rather avoid the abstractions and dependencies.
"Go forth into the source" - Neal Morse
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BINGO- We have a winner!
I use the .Net implementation of ADO to connect C# to SQL Server, and just parallel develop my classes and tables.
Director of Transmogrification Services
Shinobi of Query Language
Master of Yoda Conditional
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Rolled my own in the 90s, rerolled many times since, in 4 different languages.
It seems that most devs who are using an ORM have it imposed from management! And they don't seem to be impressed.
This thread will be shared with my management
Never underestimate the power of human stupidity
RAH
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Entity Framework (.Net Core) - with PostgreSQL. It's what the team uses and so far no major issues with it.
In the past I've rolled my own, used Linq to SQL and an older version of EF.
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LLBLGen Pro, with it's own framework, but it also supports L2S and EF.
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Dapper.
It's insanely fast and extremely flexible to work with.
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+1 for Dapper along with Dapper.Contrib.
I actively avoid contracts that state EF as a requirement. I understand for some people it's the dog danglies but I can't see a compelling case to use EF.
I know that's just my mileage but I genuinely would like to know why people use EF as opposed to a micro-orm like Dapper or PetaPoco.
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Didn't see your [Dapper] reply before I submitted mine. I use Dapper as well, for the primary reason that you mentioned, it's insanely fast!
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Rolled my own, which of course has developed over various projects.
I have looked at NHibernate and EF. Found NHibernate to be badly documented to the point I couldn't (on my own, as a freelancer) actually get anything to work at all. EF was simple enough to get started with, but trying to maintain it without everything breaking was difficult. Even harder when trying to either optimise things or extend functionality.
My own seems very easy to maintain/extend, but of course that's because I know every line of code having written them. I guess to an outside it might be tricky and it does require some hand-coding for each object; but it's a very mechanical process involving just 2 lines of code per d/b field, and a couple of constants.
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