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Review: eXpress Persistent Objects for .NET
- By Mike Gunderloy
- November 12, 2003
eXpress Persistent Objects for .NET
$149.99 ($199.99 with source code)
Developer Express
Las Vegas, Nevada
(702) 262-0609
www.devexpress.com
Here's another product to make the link between objects in your .NET
code and a database for persistent storage. The DevExpress folks have
done a good job of making the most common case easy. Here, for example,
is all the code you need to write to define, create, and save a Customer
object:
Public class Customer : Inherits XPObject
Public Name As String
Public CompanyName As String
End Class
Dim c As Customer = New Customer()
With c
.Name = "Mike Gunderloy"
.CompanyName = "ADT"
.Save
End With
That's it! But where, you may be wondering, is the database code? The
answer is that XPO takes its best guess at what you want to do by using
the Microsoft Access database provider, using the application name and
folder for the database name and folder, and creating the database if it
doesn't exist already. If you want to overrride these defaults, you just
need to assign your own connection string to the default Session object
before you start using any persisted objects. XPO can work with either
an Access or a SQL Server database, and in fact none of your application
code needs to change if you switch from one to the other.
Of course, XPO also supports one-to-many relations between objects. It
does this with a simple attribute syntax:
Public Class Address : Inherits XPObject
_
Public Owner As Person
Public City As String
Public Street As String
End Class
Public Class Person : Inherits XPObject
_
Public ReadOnly Property Addresses() As XPCollection
Get
Return GetCollection("Addresses")
End Get
End Property
...
End Class
XP also offers some other features, including delayed loading for large
properties (again, controlled by attributes), a querying syntax to
search for objects in the database, and transaction and optimistic
concurrency support. The product installs easily and comes with a full
set of help files, tutorials, and sample code to get you started.
............
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About the Author
Mike Gunderloy has been developing software for a quarter-century now, and writing about it for nearly as long. He walked away from a .NET development career in 2006 and has been a happy Rails user ever since. Mike blogs at A Fresh Cup.