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Programming Entity Framework

Programming Entity Framework
By Julia Lerman, Lerman Julia

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Product Description

Written by Julia Lerman, the leading independent authority on the framework, Programming Entity Framework includes scores of reusable examples--written in both Visual Basic and C#--that you can implement right away. This book will help you:

  • Understand the core concepts you need to make the best use of the Entity Framework (EF) in your applications
  • Learn to query your data, using either LINQ to Entities or Entity SQL
  • Create Windows Forms, WPF, and ASP.NET applications
  • Build ASMX web services and WCF services
  • Use Object Services to work directly with your entity objects
  • Delve into model customization, relationship management, change tracking, data concurrency, and more

Presented in a clear narrative style that reflects the hundreds of hours the author has spent consulting, teaching, and writing about this new data access technology and testing its myriad features, Programming Entity Framework will help you master the technology and put it to work.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #114018 in Books
  • Published on: 2009-02-12
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 828 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com Review

Programming Entity Framework is a thorough introduction to Microsoft's new core framework for modeling and interacting with data in .NET applications. This highly-acclaimed book not only gives experienced developers a hands-on tour of the Entity Framework and explains its use in a variety of applications, it also provides a deep understanding of its architecture and APIs. Although this book is based on the first version of Entity Framework, it will continue to be extremely valuable as you shift to the Entity Framework version in .NET Framework 4.0 and Visual Studio 2010. From the Entity Data Model (EDM) and Object Services to EntityClient and the Metadata Workspace, this book covers it all.

Working with Object Services

(Excerpt from Chapter 9)

Most of the work that you will do in the Entity Framework will involve the objects that are based on the entities in your Entity Data Model (EDM). The Object Services API is the part of the framework that creates and manages these objects. Although you have worked with Object Services in much of the code you wrote in earlier chapters, and you have touched on a variety of its topics along the way, you haven't yet seen the big picture. The API has a lot of tools that you can access directly to take charge of your entity objects.

This chapter is devoted to giving you a better understanding of the Object Services API: what it is responsible for, what it does under the covers, and some of the ways that you can take advantage of it.
You will learn about how queries are processed and turned into objects, how these objects are managed during their life cycle, and how Object Services is responsible for the way entities are related to each other. You will see how the ObjectQuery works and how it relates to LINQ to Entities queries under the covers. This chapter will also give you a better understanding of how Object Services manages an entity's state, beyond what you learned in Chapter 5.
As you become more familiar with the purpose, features, and implementation of Object Services, you will be better prepared to solve some of the challenges you will face as you move from using the "drag-and-drop" application-building features that Visual Studio provides to building enterprise applications where you need to have much more control over how all of the pieces of the application interact with one another.

Where Does Object Services Fit into the Framework?


Object Services is at the top of the food chain in the Entity Framework. The namespace for this API is System.Data.Objects, and it provides all of the necessary functionality for generating and interacting with the objects that are shaped by the conceptual layer and are populated from a data store.
As shown in the figure, Object Services initially processes your LINQ to Entities and ObjectQuery queries, as well as materializes the query results into objects.

Object Services as it relates to the rest of the Entity Framework stack
You can divide the core functionality of Object Services into seven areas:
1) Query processing
2) Object materialization
3) Object management
4) Object relationship management
5) Object state management
6) Database Manipulation Language (DML) command processing
7) Additional features

About the Author
Julia Lerman is the leading independent authority on the Entity Framework and has been using and teaching the technology since its inception two years ago. She is well known in the .NET community as a Microsoft MVP, ASPInsider and INETA Speaker. She is a prolific blogger, a frequent presenter at technical conferences around the world, including DevConnections and TechEd and she writes articles for many well-known technical publications.


Customer Reviews

Excellent broad coverage that also goes deep into subjects5
This is definitely the book to have by your side if you are programming with the ADO.NET Entity Framework 1.0.

The author touches on a ton of subjects that include: Data Binding with Windows Forms and WPF Applications, Using Stored Procedures with the EDM, LINQ to Entities Queries, Customizing Entities, Using the ASP.NET EntityDataSource Control, Using Entities with Web and WCF Services, Using the Entity Framework in n-Tier ASP.NET Applications and n-Tier Client-Side Applications, Handling Entity Framework Exceptions, Performance, Security, Multithreaded Applications, and much more.

There is a lot covered in this book. One of the coolest things about this book is the amount of new possibilities it introduces. Many which I would not have considered without seeing them in this book.

I also like that the book covers the architectural aspects of integrating EF into several different types of architectures.

The author drills into each subject enough to get a thorough understand. With all the material covered, that is rare, but the book is an 800 page whopper.

I have been working with the EF 1.0 since its release in August and can say that this book has more information jammed into it than all the other resources I have been using combined.

The book includes VB.NET and C# code examples.

The book has a support site (google for learnentityframework) with the code samples and the database scripts available. The downloaded code is also in both VB.NET and C#. It is well organized and very usable.

The book is very well organized and is a good read. The author has a good writing style.

All in all, I do not think you can do without this book if you are going to do anything besides play around with the Entity Framework.

Essential & Superb5
What a wonderful book. Clearly written. Comprehensive. Candid. More than a year in the making and well worth every pound. To be fair, I've just started reading (it arrived only 5 days ago) and I've been dipping in at various points. A more thorough review awaits. But this I know: every few pages I find myself exclaiming "very well said!" or "I didn't know that!"

It happens to me whether I'm reading the introduction to EDM, the discussion of n-tier and Astoria, Entity SQL versus LINQ for Entities, Expression versus Method syntax, stored procedures, views, Defined Queries. All covered simply, correctly, and intelligently. I may have hundreds more pages to discover but I've got my money's worth already and I'm buying copies for the office.

If you are using Entity Framework or think you might want to ... this is the book to own. I'm looking forward to seeing more EF books from other authors but I doubt they can equal or surpass this one.

A quick note of "full disclosure": First, I've met Ms. Lerman once, we've corresponded a few times, but there is no other connection and, as my momma taught me, if I didn't have something nice to say ... I wouldn't have had to say anything at all. Second, I've been working with Entity Framework for almost a year; I'd know if there was any fluff or BS and I have found none.

I'll be back w/ more thoughts soon ... just had to register my thumbs up now.

A real page turner!5
I'm a seasoned VB6/PHP/Green Screen developer who has floated around .NET but never gone beyond tinkering. Entity Framework (and LINQ and MVC) have convinced me that it's time to jump fully on the .NET wagon.

I'm loving this book because while it assumes the reader knows how to write a program, it doesn't assume that the reader is a .NET programmer. It explains Entity Framework excellently while also explaining Visual Studio/.NET concepts succinctly, without wasting the reader's time explaining what an integer is.

The many pointers to web resources for further information are greatly appreciated and increase the book's value to someone, like me, coming to .NET rather late in the game without bogging down the book for seasoned .NET programmers.

Finally, the author's use of a "brown field" application for the examples, complete with "legacy typos" and examples of how EF can free you of legacy design flaws while leaving the legacy intact show that the author has been in the trenches writing real code and has a great deal of wisdom beyond Entity Framework to share.