vote up 3 vote down star
1

I have some friends who are 'old-school' VB6 database developers and I was telling them about .NET and its features, specifically ADO.NET.

In our conversation, they brought up the following reasons why they would rather stick with ADO than move to ADO.NET:

  • The Dataset is disconnected (What if power fails?)
  • The same amount of code still has to be written
  • The new options of Dataset, BindingSource and TableAdapter seem confusing
  • the same code is written programatically access the Database, all that changes is how that command is laid out

I'm looking for answers or reasons why ADO.NET is 'better' than ADO with regards to data access when it comes to Windows Forms applications. What does ADO.NET provide that ADO does not? What does it do better than ADO?

NB: I'd like examples that do not involve LINQ.

flag

77% accept rate
@gortok - thanks for editing and making it concise.. – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 18:09
The power fails argument is pretty weak. ADO.NET or not, that app is going to crash somewhere if the server side components stop responding. – JohnFx Jul 21 at 18:59
What i meant there for power failure was that, say the power fails on the host machine and the data is still in the dataset, what happens then?isn't there any mechanism to make it autocommit? – Anirudh Goel Jul 22 at 3:42

8 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

On the one hand, if it ain't broke, don't fix it. But on the other - VB6? Really? Sounds like ADO vs. ADO.NET is small potatoes here...

I think the issue is more VB vs. VB.NET and then the whole code-base, skill-set, other-non-technical-considerations come into play here.

link|flag
i liked your point here. Can you point me some good reads for a better understanding? – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 18:13
1  
Oh my, this is huge. Why are there still COBOL programs around? Because the company can't justify rewriting it: It works, the original devs are long gone, etc. etc. Some googling should turn up lots of hits on rewrites, migration, etc. – n8wrl Jul 21 at 18:52
1  
Or look at the stackoverflow questions tagged vb6-migration, rewrite, migration etc. Like this stackoverflow.com/questions/… – MarkJ Jul 22 at 18:08
Code base is a non-technical consideration? Can you explain that please? – MarkJ Jul 24 at 8:33
1  
@n8wrl: I totally agree code-base is a strategic asset & an important investment, but I think that's a technical consideration. potAYto poTAHto I suppose. – MarkJ Jul 24 at 19:01
show 1 more comment
vote up 5 vote down

ADO is unsupported COM-based technology. VB 6.0 is end of life unsupported technology as of March 2008. DAO, RDO, ADO are all technologies that are nearly a decade past their prime.

ADO.NET is a modern toolset for data access. In particular, LINQ to SQL and the Entity Framework take data access to new heights.

link|flag
1  
Actually the VB6 runtime is still supported on Windows 7 and 2008 server. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/vbrun/… – MarkJ Jul 21 at 17:55
5  
ARRRRGH, when will this fu**ing thing dieee!!!!!111 – Janie Jul 21 at 18:00
linq was released with .net 3.5 so ado.net wasn't any where till then? – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 18:11
entity framework came in with3.5 SP1!! – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 18:12
LINQ to SQL and Entity Framework did come later on yes, but ADO.NET all along has been a more dynamic, lightweight-flat API, higher performance, more remoteable API. – Nissan Fan Jul 21 at 18:18
show 3 more comments
vote up 4 vote down

There's nothing wrong with using ADO in legacy VB6 applications. And if these applications are functioning correctly there's no reason to change them.

I don't think anyone programming in .Net will be too tempted to try to use ADO since it feels like such a hack job when you try to. Just let them be.

link|flag
you are answering what i want to hear, Tell me a scenario comparing the solution in both VB and VB.NET which uses ADO / ADO.NET and apart from performance how else is it different? – Anirudh Goel Jul 21 at 18:15
1  
There are really no stark differences aside from performance. They both allow you to return data from a SQL database using SQL queries. Functionally they're the same exact thing. msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/… – Spencer Ruport Jul 21 at 18:19
vote up 2 vote down

Simple answer: don't convince them...

Have them look at LINQ to SQL (or better yet LINQ to Entities)

link|flag
2  
or better yet, NHibernate. – David P Jul 21 at 17:46
Maybe MS will port Linq to VB6 – n8wrl Jul 21 at 17:50
I think any of our recommendations beat VB + ADO lol ;) – Janie Jul 21 at 17:50
1  
lol n8wrl!!!!!! – Janie Jul 21 at 17:51
vote up 1 vote down

One of the biggest issues that was able to get people to switch to ADO.NET at my day job was the fact that ADO (VB6 flavor) is all COM, you get better performance with ADO.NET.

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I heard a rumor that the VB6 runtime will not ship after Windows 7...

link|flag
Fat chance of that. Do you know how many VB apps there are out there that would suddenly stop working? Look at it from MS's point of view, if a user was running a legacy VB6 app fine on XP and it breaks when they upgrade Windows, who do they blame? – JohnFx Jul 21 at 18:58
I'm sure they don't want to ship it after Windows 7, but since they haven't provided a decent migration route to get VB6 apps to VB.NET, they might have to keep shipping it. – MarkJ Jul 24 at 8:32
Seriously, when do you move on? MS's end of life for VB6 was March 2008. The last release of VB6 was 1998. Windows 7 will be around for the next 3 to 4 years. Windows 8 will enter the scene sometime in the next 3 to 4 years. Give a year or so for Windows 8 adoption. So in 15 to 16 years if people haven't moved on, it's either an application that has value and should be ported or it's going to be an application that simply won't work. Whatever the case MS shouldn't have to support VB6. That would be like MS supporting Windows 98, 15 years after it's release. That's just nuts. – Charles Conway Jul 25 at 3:20
2  
Microsoft's decisions have made it expensive to port VB6 applications. Some of their biggest customers have a lot of money invested in VB6 applications. They don't want to spend more money porting these working applications just to help Microsoft. Therefore Microsoft have been forced to continue support for the VB6 runtime. They've done it to themselves. Personally I'd like to see Microsoft buy up the third-party companies who have written decent VB6 migration tools and make them free. – MarkJ Aug 26 at 17:11
vote up 0 vote down

I'm guessing if the recordset is still connected and the power goes out on the server, the user would get prompted immediately in their app before they continue to enter data that won't get saved?

How about memory garbage collection?

Distributing updates is easier in .net.

I guess if you have a lot of code in VB 6 for winform apps why change? Maybe if you start a new project using VB.NET you can show some other benefits like including multiple tables in a table adapter (Can't say I've taken advantage of that).

link|flag
vote up 0 vote down

I prefer ADO.NET myself, but just for balance, there is one advantage of classic ADO over ADO.NET: it is arguably more usable.

Our customers found it difficult to use [ADO.NET] because of the extensive initialisation it requires. Even in the simplest scenarios, users are expected to understand complex interactions and dependencies between several types... Note that many of these problems were addressed in the .NET framework 2.0.

Written by the architects of the .NET framework, in the .NET Framework Design Guidelines 2nd Edition page 25.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.