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16:00
because object[] is an object
CASE WHEN
I should have said, object, params object[]
@ton.yeung Really? I don't know if my boss will go for that.
@ton.yeung And you can press the PrntScrn button to capture a screenshot.
Thanks @ton.yeung .. sometime I am just plain lazy
@ton.yeung They already bought the SQL Licensing.
@ton.yeung Will the Entity Framework suck that much? Or will add complexity only?
16:02
@Greg I have this doubt long time..
@Greg Entity Frameworks doesn't suck after years and years and years of experience
@ton.yeung You mean a ton of IRepository implementations.
or If you don't care about performance
To answer my question you can add an integer type to an enumeration
and it doesn't cycle
No compromise @ton.yeung .. just get the Julie Lerman books
16:03
@DavidDV Well, I do care.
I don't like writing garbage.
Then be prepared to put a lot of time in your Entity Framework
or just use bltoolkit
but that is not popular
What is it?
Is it some type of logic toolkit for the domain layer or something?
16:05
Ah, yes it is.
How do you get the value of an enum?
been using that more then 3-4 years now, never any problems
I don't want to make the ORM happy, but I do want to ensure optimal performance and ensure my code doesn't look like a pasta bowl.
@Alizter Cast it to int I think
@KendallFrey Thank you!
16:06
@ton.yeung So the actual database design?
Still reading that document.
that is only for fat ORMs like EF and NH
Blt doens't fix the OR impedance mismatch for you
Which is better
@ton.yeung Hm...
no
just take a look
for example
5
A: NHibernate vs. EF 4.1+

David  DVYou could use bltoolkit ;) -> http://www.bltoolkit.net/Doc.Linq.ashx Just take 2 minutes to read this -> http://www.bltoolkit.net/Doc.LinqModel.ashx But in short extremely good Linq support DML operations (nr 9) great performace / bulk support great generated Sql enum support ;-) no lazy loa...

hey I got a math problem:
-14+5k <= 9-4k < 2k + 27
is that solvable
I dont think it is
edc
edc
linear prorgramming :)
16:14
lol
can anyone help?
@DavidDV That is sleek.
@RoelvanUden what are they doing?
yes it is
"But that is not really ORM"
16:15
@JABFreeware Solved it for you.
@RoelvanUden thanks that will work, but how?
hmmm...
I don't ask math questions, I assume the experts are correct.
@RoelvanUden you do when you have to show your work on a test ;)
I don't do tests :P
@rode
@RoelvanUden nice pic mate
16:18
Thanks :3
@RoelvanUden that sentai?
@c0dem0nkey No~
so who here knows math beyond wolframalpha?
ohhh oryt
Like everything else, used properly EF and NHibernate can be just as fast, just as lean, and un-leaky as anything else. Taking the time to learn a tool properly pays off.
@ton.yeung lol less leaky, you still didn't read my post I guess, anyway would be surprised is there is anything more leaky then EF and NH
edc
edc
@JABFreeware This is essentially two equations.
@CharlieBrown no It doesn't pay off to learn it properly it is REQUIRED
16:21
Well, this opens up alot more data.
I've always wonder why people say EF is leaky, can someone educate me?
I'm not sure I'm a pro, I might screw up the early architecture.
@CharlieBrown I don't know, I know the minimal bit at the moment. Haven't had too much interaction.
edc
edc
@JABFreeware @RoelvanUden did it by hand... ya same result lol
edc
edc
there is no exact equal sign to the math problem
16:25
the rest of that article is BS btw
@DavidDV that article shows a somewhat leaky abstraction, but it isnt EF anyway
@ton.yeung Please define it in the context of EF
I'm not going to hold your hand on this
Can someone tell me what EF is?
EF Is a POS ORM from MS
:D
@NinjaEcho look up EF
16:27
EF or ef may refer to: Computing * Entity Framework, an object-relational mapping (ORM) framework for the .NET Framework Culture * Ef (band), a post-rock band from Sweden * ', a Japanese adult visual novel series by Minori, or its anime adaptations Linguistics * Ef (Cyrillic) (Ф, ф), a letter in the Cyrillic alphabet * F, a Latin letter Organizations * Eagle Forum, anti-feminist conservative interest group * Earth First! movement, in environmentalism * Eastern Fare, a music institution and production house in Bangalore, India * EF Education First an international education organi...
Point of service... object.. relational... mangagement... from microsoft? t.t
Yes, I certainly understand what a leaky abstraction is, thats not my question.
Ah. thank you @KendallFrey
Then I guess you don't know what EF is,
In the current version of EF, using a code first approach, I see very little leakyness
16:28
POS = piece of shit btw ;)
@ton.yeung yes
Yes if you use it properly you have less leaks, applause
@ton.yeung They are on 6.0 or greater now
I don't see any leaks in my code
16:30
@ton.yeung I know, was just telling you. I believe 5.0 / 6.0 were huge releases.
so you don't have any N + 1 selects?
Only thing I know is that when I look at demos of applications written with NH or EF they are always very SLOW
@ton.yeung I'm just trying to figure out the best way to start this project.
And when I mention that to the developers, they don't care
of course, all things are relative, using lazy loading unwisely leaves much to be desired when it comes to speed
16:32
@DavidDV If you asked me, I would care. My code is like a women sleek, elegant, beautiful, and performs awesome!
me? a dork?! why, I never
I am saving and loading 3mil+ data points into EF within seconds, so in my case, speed does not seem to be an issue
@CCInc good ol mike
this is a flat save with no graph, so it doesnt do anything crazy to map it
so no problems with N + 1
anyway EF is ok if you take a very long time to use it properly
and if you don't your app will suck
16:34
I have lazy disabled, so no N+1
whatever gets you to a working product the fastest
you take performance hits on every abstraction
but hopefully the benefits out weigh that
That still confuses me, you can write a simple class with 1 property, subclass dbcontext and call savechanges()... thats it
you take performance hits? WTF, your users take that performance hit
Doesnt take long to learn that
performance is relative
16:36
No if you know how to use it it doesn't take long to learn it
not everybody is buiding apps for 10k concurrents
@drch - I made a user script that turns your text area for chat into a javascript console
hello mateys
@TravisJ ha!
sweet
If you save a deeply nested object graph and need amazeballs performance, your options are learn to make ORM fast, or spend more time making your own
16:36
It is here
omg if you have N + 1 Select problems you get performance problems VERY fast
... I'm fairly certain, I'm more confused on which approach to take then before.
lazy load = off... no n+1 select problem
So in essence you take EF, and disable features so that you get a Bad version of BLT
great :p
@CharlieBrown was a comment on drch 10k users
@Greg with what?
edc
edc
16:38
different tool for different situation :)
@Greg You're deciding on a ORM?
@TravisJ I have to write a Content Management System with some unique capabilities; to later integrate into our Business Management Software. So I'm trying to decide on some architecture.
@DavidDV keep lazy loading on in your service layer and detach entities before you pass them from there. best of both worlds ;)
@Greg - Which part of the architecture?
@TravisJ The Data Layer.
16:39
I don't need lazy loading
@Greg Do you want model-first or code-first approach?
@Greg - Is it going to be a separate service?
the argument that 'if you use EF, you get N+1' and 'if you disable lazy loading you shouldn't be using EF' is kind of ridiculous
BLT is far more leaky than EF
public abstract class PersonAccessor : DataAccessor
{
    [SqlText(@"SELECT * FROM Person WHERE FirstName = @firstName")]
    public abstract List<Person> GetPersonListByFirstName(string @firstName);

    [SprocName("sp_GetPersonListByLastName")]
    public abstract List<Person> GetPersonListByLastName(string @lastName);
Have you used it?
lol
16:40
@RoelvanUden Not entirely sure yet, more then likely Model-First.
@CharlieBrown that looks awful
THATS BLT
that is a part of it
nasty
Looks like its leaking some sql everywhere
16:41
needs more bacon lettuce and tomato
@Greg - I would suggest looking at it like this. EF has tons of features, and is a little slower than other libraries but not by some huge margin. NHibernate has less features and requires more configuration but runs a little faster - it also takes longer to deal with. Dapper is the fastest ORM at the moment, but it has a little bit of a learning curve at first.
@Greg If you prefer model first, then the mapper you use is not that interesting besides performance concerns. Does it need to handle a high load?
if im going to be writing sql, its going to be because im NOT using an orm
@Greg - Are you code centric ?
and need the perf
16:41
Blt has a better linq provider then EF
How do you get the size of a graphics object?
w*h*pixel density?
@RoelvanUden @TravisJ I do tend to try to optimize and code; but I'll have a good chunk of users on the application. If half our customer base upgrades to my project it will have around 15,000 or more.
wait Graphics has a Dpi property
@Greg Are hardware costs a concern?
16:44
@Greg - What is the timeframe? What type of server are you using - in house, cloud, something cool I have never heard of before?
@RoelvanUden Yeah, currently they expect the project to be hosted on an Intel Xeon Six Core, with 16GB Memory, and a SSD.
@Greg Hmm, and how many of those users will be using it at the same time?
Just 1? Not a cluster?
So they want to start off small, then implement load balancing if required.
You need like 5-10 of those
Well then worry about micro op when you start load balancing.
And go with what devs fastest
16:45
@TravisJ They are trying to keep cost low, then as it grows upgrade. That way the revenue stream grows as well.
(EF)
On my newest project, I've dropped the orm entirely and just push data right into Azure Table storage
So I've got to build with agility and expandability in mind.
no schema, fast, scalable. loves
@CharlieBrown - sprocs?
16:46
on my latest project, i just use email and a filing cabinet
@TravisJ no, just rest push objects
@Greg If you use EF now and want to swap it out later, you get a significant amount of work to chew on. Rather, since performance/hardware is an issue, I would recommend using a better optimized library instead. Dapper, Massive and PetaPoco come to mind. BLT is quite nice too, it's really fast compared to EF, but has a bit of a learning curve you need to deal with.
killing me with the ef misconceptions
dapper is not orm, its om
Since @Greg is going for model-first, he doesn't need the relational mapping.
16:47
why in sweet unicorns would it require work to swap out ef more than any other?
Therefore, EF is beyond pointless really.
@CCInc if you know what I meeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeean
the thing too chose BLT instead of Massive/Dapper is the linq provider
@RoelvanUden huh? no relationships?
Without turning this into a debate, could you clarify a bit for me?
16:48
Even with model first, you need the relations to use Include (which is a huge feature)
@NinjaEcho look up Business Logic Toolkit
A BLT (Bacon, Lettuce, and Tomato) is a type of bacon sandwich. The standard BLT is made up of five ingredients: bacon, lettuce, tomato, mayonnaise, and bread. The BLT evolved from the tea sandwiches served before 1900 at a similar time to the club sandwich, although it is unclear when the name BLT became the norm. Recipe While there are variations on the BLT, the essential ingredients are bacon, lettuce, tomato, mayonnaise and bread. Iceberg lettuce is a common choice because it does not add too much flavour whilst adding crunch. a suggestion that Jon Bonné, lifestyle editor at MSNBC...
Yeah, I need some relationships.
go EF or NHibernate
@kush Business Logic Toolkit (BLT)
16:48
Include is the only way to get speed out of a query because it implements the joins.
well supported, lots of documentation, lots of SO coverage
Yes, @drch, @Greg is going for model-first and that was the first question I asked of him. He'll design the database by hand and all the fancy generation both EF and Hibernate bring to the table are made redundant. Since performance is an issue, it is better to use something faster such as BLT, Dapper, or Massive. BLT has nice Linq, but Massive is much faster.
Both EF and nHibernate waste a significant amount of CPU power to do trivial things.
@NinjaEcho look up Business Logic Toolkit
Business Logic Toolkit (BLToolkit) includes ORM components to simplify .NET application and SQL databases development. It is provided as open source code that you can use and edit to fit your needs. It is entirely written in C# and is compatible with .NET Framework 3.5 and later.
@ton.yeung if your referring to Azure, correct. Azure tables are a schemaless object store
16:50
id be reluctant to use an ORM built by 'some guy'
What trade offs would I have @RoelvanUden?
@drch what about by 'this guy'? haha
@drch so EF is made by some greek god or something :p
@DavidDV no, some company called microsoft
might have heard of them
maybe slightly more often than Igor Tkachev
So people here like EF now?
How does something have v1 and then miraculously have v4?
where did 2 and 3 go?
16:52
@ton.yeung yeah, it is a bit silly. azure sql for relational. azure tables for nosql, azure blobs for blobs... well, they got one right
you can write poorly performing code regardless of your data layer. id use things that are well supported that can get you going quickly and worry about performance issues when you have real metrics
2
@kush there was 2 and 3
dapper is cool too cause its so simple its hard to really fuck it up
but you end up writing a lot of sql which i dislike
@CharlieBrown really?
@Greg EF, nHibernate and BLT can create queries for you, making it trivial to get data from the database without having to think about the SQL structure. BLT is the most performent of those, EF/nHibernate give a lot of options that you already opted you don't need. Massive/PetaPoco use raw SQL so you have to write queries by hand, in turn, they are even 40% faster compared to BLT (and over 9000% compared to EF/nHibernate). Dapper uses a custom SQL format, it blends between Linq and SQL.
16:53
@drch Is that why it is so fast? Because of all the SQL?
@kush yeah, but it was awful so they called it linqtosql :)
@Greg dapper just helps you convert queries to objects
@kush I believe it started at 3.5
@drch well supported remember Linq2Sql :p
@RoelvanUden That is good information, hm. Dapper sounds pretty nice.
16:54
@CharlieBrown yes .NET 3.5
SO uses Dapper.
SO staff wrote Dapper, even.
SO devs wrote Dapper
:p
Model first is the best way to go.
ima write a parody called fapper
16:55
Lol
also, you will find EF and NHibernate in job ads
wb @Kendall :)
17
A: Linq2SQL vs EF in .net Framework 4.0

RPM1984Here are some reasons why Entity Framework (v4) is better: 1 - L2SQL is essentially obsolete 2 - L2SQL does not support POCO mapping, EF does. 3 - EF has more flexibility (code first, model first, database first). L2SQL has only 1. 4 - EF has support for SPROC -> POCO mapping 5 - EF has Enti...

BLT not so much, unless youre applying as a short order cook
Dapper looks very interesting
16:55
Golly my voice is shot.
Unfortunately a lot of people misunderstand model first.
Yeah, it looks very interesting.
Probably not something you need @Greg, but Massive and PetaPoco are really small and you can spend just one day to truly understand how it is put together. I did this and wrote my own ODM inspired by their work. It's fun, but probably not something you need to get productive sooner. :D
@CharlieBrown i used dapper in a oracle project
was nice
but thats cause the rest of the project was all raw sql queries
16:56
@TravisJ I figure that by designing the database in entirety correctly, it will help leverage a better database.
and F that
@ton.yeung - Didn't you look at any of the material we posted last time? It covered the holes you have in understanding it. @Johan provided several links and a very good video on using EF
@RoelvanUden So, those are the three you would recommend?
bltoolkit on nuget: 1200 downloads
er 8900
@Greg Absolutely. All those abstractions make it so much harder to correct database design when the generation was terrible. Doing both SQL structure and queries by hand can leverage the best results (And also the most terrible).
16:57
NHibernate: 302,067
EF 1,980,200
if youre going to use BLT, make sure DV is gonna be around to offer you support.
@RoelvanUden Yeah, well... I currently maintain our entire inner / cloud oriented databases.
@Greg It depends entirely on your preferences. PetaPoco requires you to model the classes you work with, whereas Massive uses dynamic and automatically maps the rows returned by the SQL. Dapper is like PetaPoco, yet with a custom syntax that makes trivial SQL easier.
you don't need support for BLT, btw reported bug are fixed
@ton - Basically the difference is that if you would rather use a graphical UML tool to make your database then codefirst is probably for you. If you would rather code your database model then model first is for you. They are still both technically codefirst techniques though. And one step further is db first, when instead of allowing EF to also create your database, you manually create the database.
but yes if you want something popular choose EF
popular is by definition good
16:59
BLT, like mentioned, it fantastic for its Linq. It has a bit of a performance trade-off though (but nothing compared to EF/nHibernate)
Honestly, how would you rate them? What do you think will help productivity while yielding the greatest performance.
IE = popular
bieber = trash
VB = popular
16:59
haha :P (nothing personal David) :(

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