Is there any reason to use LINQ to SQL, or should I just jump into Entities?
I'm hardly objective (as a die-hard LinqToSql user), but this is answerable.
Object Relational Mapping technologies are attempts to solve or mitigate Object-relational impedance mismatch. They are bridges between the two worlds - the object world and the relational data world.
And it seems that the developers of these bridges generally call one side or the other, home.
LinqToSql is an ORM from the object side. It was developed by the C# team and lets you use objects to represent data. In LinqToSql there are no compiler-opaque strings, all queries are checked by the compiler against the mapping.
EF is an ORM from the data side. It was developed by the ADO team and lets you use data represented as objects. In EF, there are plenty of opaque strings.
Queries have to ultimately run against a database, and the compiler cannot certify that the database available at run-time matches the mapping (true in either ORM). Because of this reality of the data world, the data team doesn't value compiler guarantees as much as the C# team.
Having worked in a TSQL backend for years, without the protection of a compiler, I happen to value highly any help the compiler is going to give me. And so I side with the C# team on this.
For example, loading a Customer with its Orders.
//linq to sql.
DataLoadOptions load = new DataLoadOptions();
load.LoadWith<Customer>(c => c.Orders); //<-- strong typed
myDataContext.LoadOptions = load;
IQueryable<Customer> query = myDataContext.Customers
.Where(c => c.CustomerId == 1);
//entity framework
IQueryable<Customer> query = myObjectContext.Customers
.Include("Orders") // <-- opaque string
.Where(c => c.Customer.Id == 1);