Home / ASP.NET Weblogs

Browse by Tags

Related Posts

  • LLBLGen Pro v2.6 has been released!

    After almost 11 months of design, development, beta testing and adding final polish, it's here: LLBLGen Pro v2.6 ! This version, which is a free upgrade for all our v2.x customers, has a couple of major new features, the biggest of course being the full implementation of Linq support in our O/R mapper...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 06-09-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Linq to Sql support added to LLBLGen Pro

    Imagine, you're sitting at your desk and you're using the Linq to Sql designer in VS.NET 2008 and you have, say, 50 entities in your model. You're happy about how things are progressing. It took a while to get the model set up, considering the wicked table and field names they cooked up in the DBA dungeon...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 05-01-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, .NET, Linq
  • Beta of Linq to LLBLGen Pro released!

    Today we released the beta of Linq to LLBLGen Pro to our customers so they can dig in and check if we provided the right code, if everything works allright etc.! If you're an LLBLGen Pro v2.x customer and you want to check out our Linq implementation, please check the customer area to download the beta...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 03-12-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 12

    (Updated Wednesday 30-jan-2008). It was mentioned that we would implement 'Skip' as well, although we already had a paging method added, TakePage(). After carefull analysis, we decided not to implement Skip for now. The reason is that it can lead to confusing queries, while paging is what the developer...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 01-29-2008, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 10

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Whoa, almost a month without an update! The truth is that I wanted to finish GroupBy support before posting another article in this ongoing series, and it took almost 3 weeks to get it right. But more on that later, first some easy stuff...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 12-21-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 8

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Today I managed to arrive back at the point I stopped with my current code base a couple of weeks ago to re-implement the expression tree reduction code. I'm not totally done with re-connecting the wires of the outer interface code to the...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-30-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 7

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Last time I talked about the switch to the approach where most Queryable extension methods should be seen as sets on their own. What happened after that? Well, initially, I continued on the path I had taken a few weeks ago: a stack based...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-28-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, part 6

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) I switched to 'part' posts instead of 'day' posts, as I realized the initial plan (post every day) isn't that useful in this case ("Today I stared at 20 lines of code for 3 hours before I realized the ideas I had yesterday didn't work as...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-12-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, Day 5

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Consuming Expression trees, back to Special Case programming? I'll show you 5 different queries and what their expression tree looks like in text (tested on Linq to Sql, so you'll see Table references) Query A: // C# var q = from c in nw...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 10-03-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
  • Developing Linq to LLBLGen Pro, Day 4

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) I hear you thinking... "In the Netherlands, days apparently have 168 hours" . Well... no (really?). Today is officially my 4th day I work on Linq support. The past couple of days since the previous post I've been working on Derived Table...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-28-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET, Linq, Linq to LLBLGen Pro
Page 1 of 4 (32 items) 1 2 3 4 Next >