Here's a way I'm doing this in an EF6/MVC5 VB.NET application.
Problem: using one query to return the getdate()
value, then using another query to update a record with the retrieved getdate()
value is unacceptable IMHO. That's two queries where only one ought to be required. Plus, the returned getdate()
value technically isn't accurate by the time it's written back, since time has passed.
Solution: the below snippet updates a single nullable datetime field to the current value of getdate()
, and returns the updated value of getdate()
(if you don't need the value returned, just remove the OUTPUT INSERTED.theTime
segment). All this is done in a SQL query.
Dim theTime As DateTime? = db.Database.SqlQuery(Of DateTime?) _
("UPDATE myTable SET theTime = getdate() OUTPUT INSERTED.theTime WHERE someRecordID = @someRecordID", New SqlParameter("@someRecordID", someRecordID)).First()
It seems like there must be some better solution (or this is a gross oversight on the part of MS, isn't using getdate() a common and proper practice while updating records?). I'd be thrilled if someone could point out a cleaner approach in the comments or a different answer.
Ideally, I'd like to be able to phrase this like:
Dim craftBeer = context.CraftBeers.Find(id)
... (update other craftBeer properties) ...
craftBeer.date_emptied = SqlServer.SqlFunction.GetDate
context.Entry(craftBeer).State = EntityState.Modfied
context.SaveChanges()
... but unfortunately, apparently SqlServer.SqlFunctions.GetDate doesn't work with EF like this.