We are developing a system using C# 4 and SQL Server 2008 R2, and following domain-driven design principles. No ORM is used. There are situations where we have an entity that holds a collection of another entity, such as:
public class Project
{
public IdCollection ParticipantUsers
{
get
{
//...
}
}
public void AddParticipantUser(Id idUser)
{
//...
}
public void RemoveParticipantUser(Id idUser)
{
//...
}
}
The ParticipantUsers
property of Project
returns a collection of the ids of the users that participate in it. The AddParticipantUser
and RemoveParticipantUser
methods, well, you get it.
The problem we found is as follows. When a project instance is sent to the repository to be made updated on the database, the ParticipantUsers
collection of ids may have changed from the last time it was retrieved: some ids may have been added, some may have been removed, and some may be exactly the same. We can use a brute force approach and delete all participant users for this project from the database, and then re-insert the current ones, but I would like to explore better approaches.
What better approaches can you think of, that allow me to only insert those ids that have been added, delete those that have been removed, and leave untouched those that are still there in the collection?
ParticipantUsers
. Add if missing, remove if no longer inParticipantUsers
, otherwise leave untouched