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Is it possible to load an entity excluding some properties? One of this entity's properties is expensive to select. I would like to lazy load this property. Is that possible?

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4 Answers 4

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Now that you have read everyone's reply, I will give you the correct answer. EF does not support lazy loading of properties. However it does support a much powerful concept then this. It's called table splitting where you can map a table to two entities. Say a product table in the the database can be mapped to product entity and ProductDetail entity. You can then move the expensive fields to the ProductDetail entity and then create a 1..1 association between prodcut and productdetail entity. You can then lazy load the productdetail association only when you need it. In my performance chapter of my book, I have a recipe called. 13-9. Moving an Expensive Property to Another Entity

Hope that helps!

Julie Lerman has an article on how to split a table

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    Thanks. I'll have to do this. But EF4 should support lazy loading on scalar properties, it can be really handy.
    – user342552
    Jul 21, 2010 at 2:32
  • I know the team is working on supporting out of the box lazy loading properties in the next version but i do think moving expensive columns to another entity opens up avenues to delay loading several expensive properties at once. Imagine you have an employee object with EmployeePicture and employeedescription which are both expensive and you want to delay load both of them but whenever you want to load them, you want to load them together. This is something that you can't do in linq to sql. Jul 21, 2010 at 3:23
  • Yes, if there are more than one expensive field, in this case EF team can enable a flag like LoadAllLazyProperties which allows EF to load all scalar properties marked as Lazy Load together, whenever any of them is requested. This improves situations like the one you mentioned without separating EntityTypes!!
    – user342552
    Jul 24, 2010 at 3:43
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With a scalar property, the only way to selectively not load a certain property is to project in ESQL or L2E:

var q = from p in Context.People
        select new
        {
            Id = p.Id,
            Name = p.Name // note no Biography
        };

+1 to Dan; doing this lazily is worse than loading it up-front. If you want to control loading, be explicit.

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  • Thanks for this suggestion. Yes, but this projection is not efficient. First, it would result in an anonymous type which cannot be used as People directly. A new People object has to be created and instantiated properly, which will be waste of time parsing between objects. This type won't be trackable either by the context.
    – user342552
    Jul 20, 2010 at 3:17
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    @Nazaf, you are prematurely optimizing. Jul 20, 2010 at 12:47
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stimms is correct, but be careful while using lazy loading. You may have performance issues and not realize the property is getting loaded at a specific location in your code. This is because it loads the data when you use the property

I prefer to use explicit loading. This way you know when they get loaded and where. Here's a link that gives an example for the LoadProperty http://sankarsan.wordpress.com/2010/05/09/ado-net-entity-framework-data-loading-part-2/

You can also you Eager Loading by using the Include method. Example here:http://wildermuth.com/2008/12/28/Caution_when_Eager_Loading_in_the_Entity_Framework

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  • stimms and Dan, I don't mean a related property, I am referring to a field (class member) like Biography (string in C# or varchar(1024) in SQL Server ) which is really expensive to load with the entity, I would like to lazy load it when necessary. As far as I know, this does not work in EF4. Is there a way to do it?
    – user342552
    Jul 18, 2010 at 19:13
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    So you want to lazy load a scalar property? Just off of the top of my head I might try splitting Biography out into it's on Entity and the setting it as a navigation property. Then I'd be able to lazy/eager/expicit load it. There may be a better way...I'll test this theory when I get a chance.
    – Dan H
    Jul 18, 2010 at 21:26
  • Thanks, it seems to be the only efficient way.
    – user342552
    Jul 21, 2010 at 2:39
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Given a query over an EntityFramework DbSet, where the targeted entity contains a BigProperty and a SmallProperty, When you're trying to only access the SmallProperty without loading the BigProperty in memory :

//this query loads the entire entity returned by FirstOrDefault() in memory
//the execution is deferred during Where; the execution happens at FirstOrDefault
db.BigEntities.Where(filter).FirstOrDefault()?.SmallProperty;

//this query only loads the SmallProperty in memory
//the execution is still deferred during Select; the execution happens at FirstOrDefault
//a subset of properties can be selected from the entity, and only those will be loaded in memory
db.BigEntities.Where(filter).Select(e=>e.SmallProperty).FirstOrDefault();

Therefore you could exploit this behaviour to only query the BigProperty where you actually need it, and use select statements to explicitly filter it out everywhere else.

I tested this with the Memory Usage functionality from the Visual Studio debug Diagnostic Tools.

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