I am using the Entity Framework now and constantly having to write inline sql because Entity framework does not support full text search and other features. Is there a ORM out there that has many features that supports advanced queries? I feel if I am going to sometimes write inline sql I might as well do all of it in inline sql. Any help here
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Take a look at:
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NHibernate is one of the bigger OR/M alternatives and Open Source that I like. It is can do some pretty "advanced" things but has a steep learning curve. | |||||
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Seriously? When using any ORM, you're always going to hit situations where it is better, cleaner, or more performant, to use SQL or call a stored proc. You shouldn't just blindly trust it do absolutely everything for you in all situations. | |||||||
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Most ORMs will still require some inline SQL every now and then. NHibernate, Linq 2 Sql, etc. don't support full text search out of the box (NHibernate has NHibernate.Search which uses Lucene.NET to perform full text search, Linq 2 Sql has access to stored procedures that you can create that use full text search). This doesn't mean you should scrap using an ORM altogether though. There's a ton of repetitive plumbing code that ORMs can save you from writing and the general use cases are all relatively easy to execute (e.g. CRUD operations) with any ORM. | |||
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Mindscape LightSpeed is an o/r mapper for .NET that supports full text search (via Lucene but extensible so you could add your own). It also supports LINQ, has a Visual Studio integrated designer with full schema round tripping so you can work model-first or database-first - whichever takes your fancy :-) There is also a free version that you can use to decide if it is right for you. I hope that helps. | |||
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You might look at LLBLGen Pro or Telerik's OpenAccess, but NHibernate is going to be the solution with the largest community around it. | |||
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Like most people here I'd recommend NHibernate, but you may want to look into using it in conjunction with CastleProject's ActiveRecord implementation. NHibernate by itself can take a bit of getting used to, but when you throw ActiveRecord on top of it things get a lot easier. I was able to do an EntityFramework->NHibernate/ActiveRecord conversion really quickly. | |||||
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Seconding what the others said, nHibernate. Plus I found this link re: full text search and nHibernate. | |||
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Have you looked at nHibernate? If you search for nHibernate and full text search you'll come up with a variety of links that talk about that particular type of search implementation. | |||
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Try with nHibernate | |||
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