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Is there any reason something like this would not work?

This is the logic I have used many times to update a record in a table with LINQ

 DataClasses1DataContext db = new DataClasses1DataContext();
 User updateUser = db.Users.Single(e => e.user == user);
 updateUser.InUse = !updateUser.InUse;
 db.Log = new System.IO.StreamWriter(@"c:\temp\linq.log") { AutoFlush = true };
 db.SubmitChanges();

(updateUser.InUse is a bit field)

For some reason it isn't working?

If I check the linq.log it is completely blank?

Could there be a problem with my .dbml? Other tables seem to work fine but I've compared properties in the .dbml and they all match.

Its as if the db.SubmitChanges(); does nto detect any updates being required.

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2 Answers

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The table could not be updated properly because it had no primary key. (Actually it had the column but the constraint was not copied when I did a SELECT INTO my dev table). The DataContext class requires a primary key for updates.

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This solved my problem also, thanks! – Tuoski Aug 17 at 12:43
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Is the InUse property a "normal" one as far as LINQ is concerned? (e.g. it's not autogenerated or anything funky like that?)

Alternatively, I don't suppose it's a Nullable<bool> is it, with a current value of null? If so, your update line isn't actually doing anything - for nullable Booleans, !null = null.

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updateUser.InUse = !updateUser.InUse; is not the problem. it is not nullable and i've tried hardcoding both false and true. it is not auto generated. – ctrlShiftBryan Oct 15 '08 at 22:43
If you change any other fields, does it update? – Jon Skeet Oct 15 '08 at 22:58

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