@juanvan Check it out, I just have to grout, do the electrical / hdmi wall plate, and remove the wood holding the top pieces in a couple days once the cement hardens.
Its a wide topic, but using EF and ASP.net, is there a relatively simple way to create a database connection to a "remote" DB? (Kind of the equivalent of PHP's mysqli_connection();). If this is way too much to cover on here thats one thing, but i need to ask.
Alright. As a follow up question (didn't find this at ALL on the interwebs), how do I go about adding things onto it? (I remember PHP had something like $insert = INSERT INTO [db] (), (), but i doubt its that easy here with all honesty)
@Xariez For your first question, it's just a matter of using the right connection string. EF connects to the DB using the connection string defined in web.config. You can set that to a remote DB, assuming it's accessible.
@Xariez A more detailed of the save method you would potentially create:
T IContext.Save<T>(T entity)
{
this.Attach(entity);
SaveChanges();
return entity;
}
Creating a list should be relatively easy (have done it in Console coding), but that probably resets each time the page loads, on the other hand, i remember I once wrote something like:
var db = (from a in db.table (where a.name == name(select db.a)); , but i honestly cant remember if that was naywhere close to it
@Xariez For your second - if you want the simplicity of raw SQL calls into the DB, you can just skip EF and do that directly with an SqlConnection/SqlCommand. It's usually a bad idea for anything except the most trivial code in non-production environments.
Yeah, if you want raw SQL just do:
using(var connection = new SqlConnection(ConnectionString))
using(var comman = new SqlCommand(query, connection))
{
connection.Open();
command.Parameters.AddWithValue(..., ...);
command.ExecuteNonQuery();
}
@Xariez EF is an ORM, meaning it maps classes to DB tables. You need an initial modeling phase - either creating your tables in the DB and then generating code for entities based on it, or code-first, just creating C# classes with appropriate attributes.
I'm not sure if it helps, but all i am making is pretty much a "log" where users can input different fields. I would create the DB, then a table, add the fields and then try to add things to those fields, then grab it and print it out onto the list (which i could imagine uses foreach?)
For EF, you'll create a DbContext object wtih a DbSet<MyObject>, which behaves a lot like a List<MyObject> but is where the mapping to the DB happens. Just add a new instance of MyObject to it and call SaveChanges.
With EF you could do:
IList<T> IContext.ExecuteStoredProcedure<T>(string procedure, params SqlParameter[] parameters)
{
return this.Database.SqlQuery<T>(procedure, parameters).ToList();
}
I swear my web forms code was working a while back (it can compile, etc..) and now that I try to run it again, I'm getting a bunch of validation errors
@CodeMaster no, you just need to figure out why your UserManager.FindByIdAsync(editUser.UserId) returns null, my bet is that your userid from viewmodel is empty or something, but i'm not on your computer, simply debug through it and you will see
@Squiggle Do you have an elegant solution to allow you to do ParentEntity.Children.Remove(child) and cause an actual delete on the child object, rather than setting its FK to null?
@Xariez One of the major points being left out, these "context" we keep referring to is a class file, that contains your Entity Framework configuration / methods of implementation. It holds key data in some instances, like how to map a database to a model, also several other aspects.
@RoelvanUden Have you ever implemented an OAuth Server without Microsoft's IdentityServer? Was hoping to do an OAuth server, that was a bit more lightweight.
I see, okay, yeah I'm seeing it doesn't just want to accept "using (var db = new LogDbContext())", so clearly i have to give it somewhere to actually use that context
the biggest I've ever seen had ~400 tables and that was only because the person that designed it thought it'd be wise to make every table relation n:n. Which meant he had to have a mapping table for every relation.
I'll need to ask this before continuign with the codetunnel link you sent me, can one create a local database via visual studio, move the whole "package" onto a remote server using WinSCP, and then have it work like any other MySQL database?
@Xariez EF is capable of creating the database structure from code, as well as migrating it, etc. So when you use EF Code First with migrations enabled (you'll come to this later), publishing your site should be as easy as running publish from VS.
By default, VS might use SQExpress which is indeed short-lived while VS is open. It's intended for development purposes to make it easier to get started. That doesn't mean you can't configure it to use any db you want
Happy New Year everyone; I hope you had a pleasant and relaxing festive holiday season. I sure did. I’m starting the new year off by giving a short — an hour long or so — talk on how you can … Continue reading →
@Xariez To be honest and fair, there's nothing all that wrong with PHP if you use it correctly. But you'll soon find that C# simply offers better libraries and compile-time protection, which accelerates your development by miles (once you get the hang of it). There is almost never a reason to choose PHP over C#.
I don't know what they are. I suppose they are inherent to the type of content you have in your app. Sounds like you were doing Web Forms or some other old-school aspx bull, so yeah, there might be additional crap for that.
That's usually the case for them cheap Linux boxes.
For entity framework what is best practice for storing / accessing data with the context?
For example if I have a contact Object, should I add a public method to contact where I can:
Contact.SaveChanges()
{
//using(context)
{
//if insert context.add()
//if update ...
}
}
?
Could anyone give me some opinions on how to use these methods asynchronously without using the (apparently much disliked) await Task.Run(() => snmp.Walk(SnmpVersion.Ver1, entryOid));? This is really just to try and prevent the UI from locking up while the queries happen. This current method I'm using (Task.Run) also seems to screw up System.NullReferenceException-style when multiple queries try and happen simultaneously.