Book Image

Entity Framework Tutorial (Update) - Second Edition

By : Joydip Kanjilal
Book Image

Entity Framework Tutorial (Update) - Second Edition

By: Joydip Kanjilal

Overview of this book

The ADO.NET Entity Framework from Microsoft is a new ADO.NET development framework that provides a level of abstraction for data access strategies and solves the impedance mismatch issues that exist between different data models This book explores Microsoft’s Entity Framework and explains how it can used to build enterprise level applications. It will also teach you how you can work with RESTful Services and Google’s Protocol Buffers with Entity Framework and WCF. You will explore how to use Entity Framework with ASP.NET Web API and also how to consume the data exposed by Entity Framework from client applications of varying types, i.e., ASP.NET MVC, WPF and Silverlight. You will familiarize yourself with the new features and improvements introduced in Entity Framework including enhanced POCO support, template-based code generation, tooling consolidation and connection resiliency. By the end of the book, you will be able to successfully extend the new functionalities of Entity framework into your project.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
Entity Framework Tutorial Second Edition
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
Index

What is the ADO.NET Entity Framework?


Entity Framework is a type of ORM. It is a development platform that provides a layer of abstraction on top of the relational or logical model. In doing so, it isolates the object model of the application from the way the data is actually stored in the relational store. Developers can use the ADO.NET Entity Framework to program against an object model rather than the logical or relationship model.

This is illustrated using the self-explanatory diagram that follows:

This level of abstraction is achieved using the Entity Data Model (EDM)—an extended entity relationship model. The EDM reduces the dependency of your domain object model on the database schema of the data store in use. We will discuss more on this topic later in this chapter.

Developers can use the ADO.NET Entity Framework to work with domain-specific properties such as employee name, employee address, contact details, and so on, without having to be concerned with how the actual data is stored and represented in the underlying data store. The framework can take care of the necessary translations to either retrieve data from your data store or perform inserts, updates, and deletes. Also, Entity Framework provides support to cache data automatically by default.

Is Entity Framework just another ORM?

The ADO.NET Entity Framework is an extended ORM technology from Microsoft. We say it is an extended ORM because it has many additional features compared to a typical ORM. ORMs often use metadata and factory classes to retrieve data or collections of data.

Note

Factory classes are based on the factory design pattern and are used to create instances of classes without exposing the instantiation logic to the client.

On the contrary, using Entity Framework, you can easily map your data to be accessible in a relational representation in the database to objects, no matter how the mapping is implemented. You can expose different data views to your application without having to change your relational schema. In essence, this allows the applications to have their own view of the data. The applications can even reuse the same views of data among themselves.

The major difference between Entity Framework and ORM tools is the EDM and the former's ability to query data using strongly typed LINQ. You can even use Entity SQL, a T-SQL-like query language to query the EDM, to execute dynamic queries. In addition to what a typical ORM framework provides, the Entity Framework provides and supports entity inheritance, entity composition, and a flexible, loosely-coupled, three-tiered model consisting of the conceptual model, the mapping layer, and the storage model. Please refer to the Appendix section for links to resources on this topic.

Entity Framework even enables you to extend the existing schema. In other words, you can extend the generated entity classes to create your own custom entity classes. You can define relationships of any kind such as one-to-one, one-to-many, and even many-to-many.