Book Image

Code-First Development with Entity Framework

By : Sergey Barskiy
Book Image

Code-First Development with Entity Framework

By: Sergey Barskiy

Overview of this book

<p>Entity Framework Code-First enables developers to read and write data in a relational database system using C# or VB.NET. It is Microsoft's answer to demand for an ORM from .NET developers.</p> <p>This book will help you acquire the necessary skills to program your applications using Entity Framework. You will start with database configuration and learn how to write classes that define the database structure. You will see how LINQ can be used with Entity Framework to give you access to stored data. You will then learn how to use Entity Framework to persist information in a Relational Database Management System. You will also see how you can benefit from writing ORM-based .NET code. Finally, you will learn how Entity Framework can help you to solve database deployment problems using migrations.</p>
Table of Contents (15 chapters)
Code-First Development with Entity Framework
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

Chapter 1: Introducing Entity Framework


Q1. Impedance mismatch between RDBMS and object-orientated programming is the main problem that ORM tools solve. They enable developers to talk to databases in the same way they talk to any other object, using the same programming language, such as C# or VB.NET.

Q2. This statement is false. LINQ can be used to create queries in Entity Framework, thus enabling developers to use C# or VB.NET instead of the SQL language.

Q3. Entity Framework Migrations are used to script and apply structural changes to the database, thus moving it from one version of your software to the next.

Q4. DbContext is the abstraction that represents a database you are working with using Entity Framework Code-First. It has collection-based properties that represent tables in the database.

Q5. The answer is false. As Entity Framework uses the provider architecture; it can work with any database that has a provider written for it. At this point, all major database engines are supported, such as MySQL, DB2, and Oracle.