Walkthrough: Querying Across Relationships (C#)
This walkthrough demonstrates the use of LINQ to SQL associations to represent foreign-key relationships in the database.
Note
Your computer might show different names or locations for some of the Visual Studio user interface elements in the following instructions. The Visual Studio edition that you have and the settings that you use determine these elements. For more information, see Personalizing the IDE.
This walkthrough was written by using Visual C# Development Settings.
Prerequisites
You must have completed Walkthrough: Simple Object Model and Query (C#). This walkthrough builds on that one, including the presence of the northwnd.mdf file in c:\linqtest5.
Overview
This walkthrough consists of three main tasks:
Adding an entity class to represent the Orders table in the sample Northwind database.
Supplementing annotations to the
Customer
class to enhance the relationship between theCustomer
andOrder
classes.Creating and running a query to test obtaining
Order
information by using theCustomer
class.
Mapping Relationships Across Tables
After the Customer
class definition, create the Order
entity class definition that includes the following code, which indicates that Order.Customer
relates as a foreign key to Customer.CustomerID
.
To add the Order entity class
Type or paste the following code after the
Customer
class:[Table(Name = "Orders")] public class Order { private int _OrderID = 0; private string _CustomerID; private EntityRef<Customer> _Customer; public Order() { this._Customer = new EntityRef<Customer>(); } [Column(Storage = "_OrderID", DbType = "Int NOT NULL IDENTITY", IsPrimaryKey = true, IsDbGenerated = true)] public int OrderID { get { return this._OrderID; } // No need to specify a setter because IsDBGenerated is // true. } [Column(Storage = "_CustomerID", DbType = "NChar(5)")] public string CustomerID { get { return this._CustomerID; } set { this._CustomerID = value; } } [Association(Storage = "_Customer", ThisKey = "CustomerID")] public Customer Customer { get { return this._Customer.Entity; } set { this._Customer.Entity = value; } } }
Annotating the Customer Class
In this step, you annotate the Customer
class to indicate its relationship to the Order
class. (This addition is not strictly necessary, because defining the relationship in either direction is sufficient to create the link. But adding this annotation does enable you to easily navigate objects in either direction.)
To annotate the Customer class
Type or paste the following code into the
Customer
class:private EntitySet<Order> _Orders; public Customer() { this._Orders = new EntitySet<Order>(); } [Association(Storage = "_Orders", OtherKey = "CustomerID")] public EntitySet<Order> Orders { get { return this._Orders; } set { this._Orders.Assign(value); } }
Creating and Running a Query Across the Customer-Order Relationship
You can now access Order
objects directly from the Customer
objects, or in the opposite order. You do not need an explicit join between customers and orders.
To access Order objects by using Customer objects
Modify the
Main
method by typing or pasting the following code into the method:// Query for customers who have placed orders. var custQuery = from cust in Customers where cust.Orders.Any() select cust; foreach (var custObj in custQuery) { Console.WriteLine("ID={0}, Qty={1}", custObj.CustomerID, custObj.Orders.Count); }
Press F5 to debug your application.
Note
You can eliminate the SQL code in the Console window by commenting out
db.Log = Console.Out;
.Press Enter in the Console window to stop debugging.
Creating a Strongly Typed View of Your Database
It is much easier to start with a strongly typed view of your database. By strongly typing the DataContext object, you do not need calls to GetTable. You can use strongly typed tables in all your queries when you use the strongly typed DataContext object.
In the following steps, you will create Customers
as a strongly typed table that maps to the Customers table in the database.
To strongly type the DataContext object
Add the following code above the
Customer
class declaration.public class Northwind : DataContext { // Table<T> abstracts database details per table/data type. public Table<Customer> Customers; public Table<Order> Orders; public Northwind(string connection) : base(connection) { } }
Modify the
Main
method to use the strongly typed DataContext as follows:// Use a connection string. Northwind db = new Northwind(@"C:\linqtest5\northwnd.mdf"); // Query for customers from Seattle. var custQuery = from cust in db.Customers where cust.City == "Seattle" select cust; foreach (var custObj in custQuery) { Console.WriteLine("ID={0}", custObj.CustomerID); } // Freeze the console window. Console.ReadLine();
Press F5 to debug your application.
The Console window output is:
ID=WHITC
Press Enter in the console window to stop debugging.
Next Steps
The next walkthrough (Walkthrough: Manipulating Data (C#)) demonstrates how to manipulate data. That walkthrough does not require that you save the two walkthroughs in this series that you have already completed.