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  • LLBLGen Pro v2.0 released!

    Whoa time flies! . After 9 months of hard work, LLBLGen Pro v2.0 has been released! LLBLGen Pro V2.0 comes with a new licensing scheme: it's now licensed per seat, instead of per-department. Current customers of v1.0.200x.y can upgrade for EUR 49.- per developer. (Designer using developers need a license...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 07-02-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: LLBLGen Pro, Database / SQL Server, .NET General, O/R Mapping, General Software Development, Software Engineering, .NET, Advanced .NET
  • Essay: The Database Model is the Domain Model

    Preface To work with data on a semantic basis, it's often useful to specify general definitions of the elements a given portion of logic will work with. For example, an order system works with, among other elements, Order elements. To be able to define how this logic works, a definition of the concept...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 08-23-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, General Software Development, .NET
  • Essay: The Database Model is the Domain Model

    Preface To work with data on a semantic basis, it's often useful to specify general definitions of the elements a given portion of logic will work with. For example, an order system works with, among other elements, Order elements. To be able to define how this logic works, a definition of the concept...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 08-23-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, General Software Development, .NET
  • LLBLGen Pro v2.0 released!

    Whoa time flies! . After 9 months of hard work, LLBLGen Pro v2.0 has been released! LLBLGen Pro V2.0 comes with a new licensing scheme: it's now licensed per seat, instead of per-department. Current customers of v1.0.200x.y can upgrade for EUR 49.- per developer. (Designer using developers need a license...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 07-02-2006, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET
  • LLBLGen Pro v2.5 has been released!

    Back in January 2007 we started designing and developing LLBLGen Pro v2.5, and it's finally here! When you develop a framework, at a given moment in time you'll wonder: "Ok, now that I have all the basics covered, which direction shall I go into now, what are the more meaningfull additions to the framework...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 08-23-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: .NET General, Database / SQL Server, Software Engineering, LLBLGen Pro, O/R Mapping, Advanced .NET, General Software Development, .NET
  • 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, day 2

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) Adding Linq support to an O/R mapper like LLBLGen Pro is a matter of choice: either you implement new SQL engines or you convert the expression trees to native query language components. The former is a lot more work and the latter will...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-14-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: 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, Day 1

    (This is part of an on-going series of articles, started here ) I didn't have that much time today to work on our Linq to LLBLGen Pro layer, but nevertheless there are a couple of interesting things to mention. . It's all about the Source, Luke Let's look at a skeleton of a very simple Linq query: /...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-12-2007, 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, Day 0

    Now v2.5 of LLBLGen Pro is out the door and the release-stress has gone away, it's time to pick up the next project, which is Linq support for LLBLGen Pro, which will be rolled into v2.6 of LLBLGen Pro, which is scheduled for Q4 2007. This time around, we thought it would be fun to blog a post on every...
    Posted to Frans Bouma's blog (Weblog) by FransBouma on 09-11-2007, 12:00 AM
    Filed under: 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 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
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