Introduction
With .NET Framework 3.5 Microsoft released Language Integrated Query aka LINQ. LINQ enables developers to query data sources using a query like syntax with both C# and VB.NET. These data sources can be collections, SQL Server databases, XML, DataSets etc. Other than what is supplied by Microsoft, LINQ is also extensible. This means that you can query data sources beyond what Microsoft ships. Examples of such implementations are LINQ To Flickr, LINQ To Amazon, LINQ to Google etc. In this article I will show you how you can use LINQ To SQL to perform CRUD operations on a SQL Server database. I will use Northwind database and build an ASP.NET application to demonstrated the capabilities of LINQ To SQL. You can download Northwind database here.Toolset for this article
- Visual Studio 2008
- .NET Framework 3.5 (This is already installed if you have Visual Studio 2008)
- SQL Server 2005 (You can also work with SQL Server Express)
Solution Structure
For this article we will need two projects. One is a data layer (created as a Class Library)which we will generate and the other is an ASP.NET Web Application. The solutions structure looks like this in Solution Explorer.Creating Data Layer
Before we generate our data layer we must create a new connection in Server Explorer which points to Northwind database.We will now generate our data layer using LINQ To SQL. To do this you need to add a new item to the data layer project of type LINQ to SQL Classes. We will name it Northwind as shown below.
After adding a LINQ to SQL Class we are presented with a designer surface. Here we can simply drag the tables which will become part of our data layer. For this article we will drag all tables on the designer by selecting them all in one go. Our designer should look like this after dragging all tables on it.
We should now build our solution to make sure everything is okay. And that’s it. We have successfully generated our data layer. In Solution Explorer we can see that we have two new files namely Northwind.dbml.layout and Northwind.designer.cs. We can also see that references required to compile and run our code have been added by Visual Studio.
The .cs file contains the code for our data layer. Let’s examine the code that has been generated for us. We will look at the Region class.
[Table(Name="dbo.Region")]
public partial class Region : INotifyPropertyChanging, INotifyPropertyChanged
[Column(Storage="_RegionDescription", DbType="NChar(50) NOT NULL",
CanBeNull=false)]
public string RegionDescription
{
get
{
return this._RegionDescription;
}
set
{
if ((this._RegionDescription != value))
{
this.OnRegionDescriptionChanging(value);
this.SendPropertyChanging();
this._RegionDescription = value;
this.SendPropertyChanged("RegionDescription");
this.OnRegionDescriptionChanged();
}
}
}
Using Data Layer
Now that we have generated our data layer. We will work on ASP.NET web application where we will use our data layer. To keep things simple we will create a web forms to search for customers and display search results. We will also create a web form to insert new customers. Let’s start by creating our web form for customer search. For this we will use the Default.aspx page. We will place few controls on the web form. These controls will give us search parameters and a button which will do the search and display results when clicked. This is what the form will look like after placing our controls.We will also place a GridView control on our form to display search results. We will now put in some code in our button’s click event handler to do the search and display results in GridView. Make sure that we have a reference to Data Layer project, System.Data.Linq and appropriate using statement. Here is what our button click event handler will contain.
protected void buttonSearch_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
using (NorthwindDataContext context = new NorthwindDataContext())
{
var customers =
from c in context.Customers
select c;
gridViewCustomers.DataSource = customers;
gridViewCustomers.DataBind();
}
}
protected void buttonSearch_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
using (NorthwindDataContext context = new NorthwindDataContext())
{
var customers =
from c in context.Customers
where (
c.ContactName.Contains(textBoxCustomerName.Text.Trim())
&&
c.CompanyName.Contains(textBoxCompanyName.Text.Trim()))
select c;
gridViewCustomers.DataSource = customers;
gridViewCustomers.DataBind();
}
}
Let us now created a data entry form for customers. We will insert a new web form in our ASP.NET project and call it CustomerEntry. To start with we will make sure that our form contains fields required to insert a customer. Our form after completion will look like this.
We expect a new row to be inserted into customers table when Save Customer button is clicked. This code achieves data insertion into customers table for us.
protected void buttonSave_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
using (NorthwindDataContext context = new NorthwindDataContext())
{
Customer customer = new Customer
{
CustomerID = textBoxCustomerID.Text,
CompanyName = textBoxCompanyName.Text,
ContactName = textBoxCustomerName.Text,
ContactTitle = textBoxTitle.Text,
Address = textBoxAddress.Text,
City = textBoxCity.Text,
Region = textBoxRegion.Text,
PostalCode = textBoxPostalCode.Text,
Country = textBoxCountry.Text,
Phone = textBoxPhone.Text,
Fax = textBoxFax.Text
};
context.Customers.InsertOnSubmit(customer);
context.SubmitChanges();
}
}
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