@KendallFrey - Canada get so many perks from being so close to the US. Not sure why all the hate. For example, manufactured goods, labor, currency stability, and defense.
@Breems - Yes, I prefer the code centric aspect of EF. I like to design the database layout in c#, and then manually set up the database according to the c# design. Mostly because if any large changes need to be made to the database at a later time, it doesn't require any migration or anything like that. Just change the c# class, change the table's composition, done.
@TravisJ One thing I've pondered is how updates to your POCOs are handled by the database. I'm in the process of learning EF, and the examples I've seen all drop and recreate the database and seed it with some test data. Are there not ways to update the database (such as adding a column) without wiping out the data entirely?
@TravisJ one problem I'm having is setting up a relationship table in EF code-first
I have a list of Birds, each of which have a list of Regions. Those regions come from a static list. Right now I just have a Regions table where there are tons of copies of these regions. I'd prefer to have something that uses less storage
Picture this: you have a bird and you want to know all the birds related to it 5 generations back. You look up the bird. Lazy load its parent, using the parent you lazy load its parent, etc. Versus, lookup all birds with the family guid, order by generation, win.
@Pheonixblade9 - As for the bird to region relation. Right now it is set up where there are many regions for one bird. Is that what you meant to do?
@Pheonixblade9 - In code first, true code first, you should be able to just set up both sides with no foreign ids and the virtual collections, i.e. bird has public virtual ICollection<Region> Regions { get; set; } and region has public virtual ICollection<Bird> Birds { get; set; } and it should automagically create the linking table behind the scenes.
I like to be a little more in control though, so I am used to manually writing the classes out. Mostly I like manually doing it because there is often logic that you can incorporate in the linking table.
@Pheonixblade9 - I have a full text search that hits 750,000 rows in mysql and it only takes 2.6 seconds. Full text isn't really that hard to implement.
@Pheonixblade9 - More users, more hardware. 10,000 doesn't seem like that many users though, SQL Server should be able to scale with that without any noticable delay.
I mean, I thrash the mysql db at the moment, and it doesn't slow down with multiple users. I think that you are probably looking at something in the ballpark of 500,000 concurrent users when you need to start using redis and whatnot
@Greg - Nope :( Because it looks like it should work to me. Check to see if the element exists? .val() implies it is an input element, .text() would be for a div or something or a span perhaps. Other than that, I am not sure. Maybe the selector is a mismatch?
You can just pass in the UserManager in the constructor of the AccountController, so it doesn't try to find it in the owinContext. The default constructor is not unit test friendly.
room topic changed to C#: I have sampled every language, C# is my favorite. Fantastic language. Especially to recurse with. Func<int,int, bool> fib = null;(fib = (a,b) => { return b < 10 ? fib(b,a+b) : true; }(0,1);. It's like wiping your arse with silk. I love it. [.net] [asp.net] [asp.net-mvc] [c#] [entity-framework] [linq] [visual-studio] [wcf] [wpf]