Book Image

NHibernate 4.x Cookbook - Second Edition

By : Gunnar Liljas, Alexander Zaytsev, Jason Dentler
Book Image

NHibernate 4.x Cookbook - Second Edition

By: Gunnar Liljas, Alexander Zaytsev, Jason Dentler

Overview of this book

NHibernate is a mature, flexible, scalable, and feature-complete open source project for data access. Although it sounds like an easy task to build and maintain database applications, it can be challenging to get beyond the basics and develop applications that meet your needs perfectly. NHibernate allows you to use plain SQL and stored procedures less and keep focus on your application logic instead. Learning the best practices for a NHibernate-based application will help you avoid problems and ensure that your project is a success. The book will take you from the absolute basics of NHibernate through to its most advanced features, showing you how to take full advantage of each concept to quickly create amazing database applications. You will learn several techniques for each of the four core NHibernate tasks—configuration, mapping, session and transaction management, and querying—and which techniques fit best with various types of applications. In short, you will be able to build an application using NHibernate by the end of the book. You will also learn how to best implement enterprise application architecture patterns using NHibernate, leading to clean, easy-to-understand code and increased productivity. In addition to new features, you will learn creative ways to extend the NHibernate core, as well as gaining techniques to work with the NHibernate search, shards, spatial, envers, and validation projects.
Table of Contents (17 chapters)
NHibernate 4.x Cookbook Second Edition
Credits
About the Authors
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Customer Feedback
Preface
Index

Setting up session-per-presenter


It's a good idea to use a session for each presenter in desktop applications using the Model View Presenter (MVP) pattern. This approach can also be adapted to the Model View View Model (MVVM) pattern. More information on these patterns is available at http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model–view–presenter and http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Model–view–viewmodel.

In this recipe, we'll show you a crude implementation of this session-per-presenter pattern with dependency injection. While MVP and MVVM are more common in Windows Forms and WPF applications, we will just create a simple console application this time.

We will use an inversion of the control container, called Ninject, in this recipe. If you're not familiar with the dependency injection or Inversion of Control concepts, a free video tutorial is available at http://tinyurl.com/iocvideo.

Note

This recipe can be completed with other dependency injection frameworks. Just substitute the NinjectBindings class with...