dotConnect for SQLite Documentation
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    LinqConnect Tutorial
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    This tutorial guides you through the process of creating a simple application powered by LinqConnect (formerly LINQ to SQLite) technology. In less than 5 minutes you will have a ready-to-use data access layer for your business objects.

    In this walkthrough:

    Introducing the LinqConnect Technology

    LinqConnect is the fast and lightweight ORM solution, which is closely compatible to Microsoft LINQ to SQL and contains its own advanced features, such as complex type support, advanced data fetching options, configurable compiled query caching, and others.

    LINQ stands for Language-Integrated Query, which means that data retrieval is no longer a separate language. The LINQ engine allows .NET applications to connect to databases without bothering much about columns and rows. The data you receive is automatically formed as objects ready to use by your business logic.

    LINQ to Relational Data may be thought of as an object-relational mapping (ORM) tool. The type-safe LINQ queries get compiled into MSIL on the fly, and the query clauses are translated into SQL and sent to SQLite database for execution. This makes your data access layer safer, faster, and greatly more convenient to design.

    Requirements

    In order to connect to SQLite database you need the server itself running, dotConnect for SQLite installed and IDE running. LinqConnect requires .NET Framework 3.5, Visual Studio 2008, and SQLite database 3 or higher. Note that LinqConnect feature is only available in Professional Edition of dotConnect for SQLite.

    In this tutorial it is assumed that you already have the database objects created. You have to execute a script from the following file installed by default to
    \Program Files\Devart\dotConnect\SQLite\Samples\crm_demo.sql

    Preparing the Project

    Create a new console application in Visual Studio. It could be any other project type as well, but for simplicity's sake we'll use console project throughout the tutorial. The rest of the tutorial assumes that the name of the project is ConsoleApplication1. If you project is named otherwise, you will have to substitute this name with the actual one in Solution Explorer.

    Generating Model from Database

    1. Add Devart LinqConnect Model to the project. To do this, right-click on the project node in Solution Explorer, point to Add, click New Item.... In the Add New Item dialog select Data category, choose Devart LinqConnect Model template, and click Add. This automatically launches Create New Model wizard, which creates a new empty model or generates it from database.
      Add item dialog box
    2. Click Next on the welcome screen.
    3. Fill in connection settings and click Next.
      Entity Developer Create Model Wizard - Setup data connection properties
    4. Choose database objects that will be used in the model. These are all objects from the crm_demo script, including auxiliary tables. Click Next.
      Entity Developer Create Model Wizard - Choose database object
    5. On the next screen you can adjust naming rules for entities and their members. For the CRM Demo database no rules are required, so just click Next.
      Entity Developer Create Model Wizard - Setup naming rules
    6. Input CrmDemoContext as namespace, and CrmDemoDataContext as the name of DataContext descendant. This will be the name of the main data access class. Click Next.
      Entity Developer Create Model Wizard - Model properties
    7. Press Finish. The model will be generated and opened in Entity Developer add-in.
    8. In the main menu, click File | Save. This updates the generated CrmDemoDataContext model code in Visual Studio.

    The model you've just generated is ready to use.

    Entity Developer diagram

    Entity Developer creates classes for all selected tables that represent entities. It also creates a descendant of Devart.Data.Linq.DataContext class, which controls the connection to the database, and the whole data flow. This class includes properties and methods named after your database objects. You will use these members to retrieve and modify data in the context. The generated code is contained in the file DataContext.Designer.cs (DataContext.Designer.vb). You may write your own partial classes and methods for it in the file DataContext.cs (DataContext.vb).

    Querying Data

    All LINQ to SQLite operations are executed through the DataContext descendant, which is named CrmDemoDataContext in this tutorial. To retrieve data you have to first create an instance of the context, then prepare a query with LinqConnect, and then access the object returned by the query, which may be a collection of objects or a single object.

    Let's read all the data from the table Company, sort it by CompanyID, and output some columns. Add the following block of code to the method Main:

    CrmDemoDataContext context = new CrmDemoDataContext();
    var query = from it in context.Companies
                orderby it.CompanyID
                select it;
    
    foreach (Company comp in query)
      Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}", comp.CompanyID, comp.CompanyName, comp.Country);
    
    Console.ReadLine();
    
    Dim context As CrmDemoDataContext = New CrmDemoDataContext
    Dim query = From it In context.companies _
        Order By it.CompanyID _
        Select it
    
    Dim comp As company
    For Each comp In query
        Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}", comp.CompanyID, comp.CompanyName, comp.Country)
    Next
    
    Console.ReadLine()
    
    

    As simple as that. You prepare a query and then iterate through it as you would do with a usual collection of objects. The database interaction is performed by LinqConnect in the background. Now let's see who is who in this code sample.

    Here is the project's output in the console:

    Output

    Note that the LINQ query code just describes the query. It does not execute it. This approach is known as deferred execution.

    Now let's query data from two tables united with a foreign key. Replace the old code with this:

    CrmDemoDataContext context = new CrmDemoDataContext();
    var query = from it in context.Companies
                orderby it.CompanyID
                select it;
    
    foreach (Company comp in query) {
      if (comp.PersonContacts.Count > 0) {
        Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}",
          comp.CompanyName, comp.PersonContacts[0].FirstName,
          comp.PersonContacts[0].LastName);
      }
    }
    
    Console.ReadLine();
    
    Dim context As CrmDemoDataContext = New CrmDemoDataContext
    Dim query = From it In context.companies _
        Order By it.CompanyID _
        Select it
    
    Dim comp As company
    For Each comp In query
        If comp.personcontacts.Count > 0 Then
            Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}", _
                  comp.CompanyName, comp.personcontacts(0).FirstName, _
                  comp.personcontacts(0).LastName)
        End If
    Next
    
    Console.ReadLine()
    
    

    As you can see, the LINQ query statement was not changed at all. The data about the contact persons was retrieved from the database automatically when you accessed the corresponding property of the company object. This is one of the great things about LINQ: you do not have to worry about dependencies when writing queries.

    Inserting New Data

    What earlier was adding rows to tables, now is just adding new objects to context collections. When you are ready to send the changes to the database, call SubmitChanges() method of the context. Before doing this, you must first set all properties that do not support null (Nothing) values. The SubmitChanges() method generates and executes commands that perform the equivalent INSERT, UPDATE, or DELETE statements against the data source.

    Let's add a new product and a new category to the database. Replace the old code with this:

    CrmDemoDataContext context = new CrmDemoDataContext();
    
    // Create a new category
    ProductCategory newCategory = new ProductCategory();
    newCategory.CategoryID = 1000;
    newCategory.CategoryName = "New category";
    
    // Create a new product
    Product newProduct = new Product();
    newProduct.ProductID = 2000;
    newProduct.ProductName = "New product";
    newProduct.Price = 20;
    
    // Associate the new product with the new category
    newProduct.ProductCategory = newCategory;
    context.Products.InsertOnSubmit(newProduct);
    
    // Send the changes to the database.
    // Until you do it, the changes are cached on the client side.
    context.SubmitChanges();
    
    // Request the new product from the database
    var query = from it in context.Products
                where it.ProductID == 2000
                select it;
    
    // Since we query for a single object instead of a collection, we can use the method First()
    Product product = query.First();
    Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}",
      product.ProductCategory.CategoryName, product.ProductName, product.Price);
    Console.ReadLine();
    
    Dim context As CrmDemoDataContext = New CrmDemoDataContext
    ' Create a new category
    Dim newCategory As productcategory = New productcategory()
    newCategory.CategoryID = 1000
    newCategory.CategoryName = "New category"
    
    ' Create a new product
    Dim newProduct As product = New product()
    newProduct.ProductID = 2000
    newProduct.ProductName = "New product"
    newProduct.Price = 20
    ' Associate the new product with the new category
    newProduct.productcategory = newCategory
    context.products.InsertOnSubmit(newProduct)
    
    ' Send the changes to the database.
    ' Until you do it, the changes are cached on the client side.
    context.SubmitChanges()
    
    ' Request the new product from the database
    Dim query = From it In context.products _
                Where it.ProductID = 2000 _
                Select it
    
    ' Since we query for a single object instead of a collection, we can use the method First()
    Dim product As product = query.First()
    Console.WriteLine("{0} | {1} | {2}", _
      product.productcategory.CategoryName, product.ProductName, product.Price)
    Console.ReadLine()
    
    

    The InsertOnSubmit() method is created for every collection in the context. This method stores in the database information about all linked objects. As shown in the example, it is only necessary to call InsertOnSubmit() once to submit both product and category objects.

    Note that after you have added the new product and category by submitting the changes, you cannot execute this solution again as is. To execute the solution again, change the IDs of the objects to be added.

    Updating Data

    Entity instances are modified as usual. The only thing to remember is that you have to invoke the SubmitChanges() method to send the data to the database.

    Append the following block to the existing code and launch the project:

    product.ProductName = "Edited product";
    product.Price = 15;
    context.SubmitChanges();
    
    product.ProductName = "Edited product"
    product.Price = 15
    context.SubmitChanges()
    
    

    Deleting Data

    To extract an instance from a context use the DeleteOnSubmit method of the corresponding collection. The object is removed from the collection of its type, but not destroyed. To delete the object's data from the database invoke the SubmitChanges() method.

    You can do this with a block of code like the following:

    context.products.DeleteOnSubmit(newProduct);
    context.productcategories.DeleteOnSubmit(newCategory);
    context.SubmitChanges();
    
    context.products.DeleteOnSubmit(newProduct)
    context.productcategories.DeleteOnSubmit(newCategory)
    context.SubmitChanges()
    
    

    Deletion of objects is affected by attributes in the model. When DeleteRule parameter is Cascade, dependent objects are deleted automatically. When this parameter is SetNull, dependent objects are not deleted, but the relation is nullified. When no rule is specified, the order of deletion sequence is important.

    Additional Information

    Now that you can perform the basic data manipulation with LinqConnect, you can move on to some advanced topics. dotConnect for SQLite includes a help section dedicated to the LinqConnect technology. You can access it online at https://www.devart.com/linqconnect/docs/ or locally in Visual Studio help collections.

    LinqConnect is developed closely to the Microsoft's implementation of LINQ to SQL, so you might find some useful information in MSDN:

    For hands-on experience use samples shipped with dotConnect for SQLite. You can access the samples from the Start menu.

    To understand deeper the works of LinqConnect engine you can watch the generated SQL statements in dbMonitor or using the DataContext.Log property.

    See Also

    LinqConnect section  | Devart LinqConnect