vote up 6 vote down star
2

I've heard it said that the Entity Framework is overkill or that it's difficult to learn compared to LinqToSql.

I am wondering in what way? I used LinqToSql and like it. So, I am trying the EF and for the things I'm doing they seem almost exactly the same. Namespaces and method names are different but so far I don't see anything that makes the EF harder than LinqToSql.

I'm sure if I start doing more comples things it gets more complex. But then again I probably can't do the same thing with LinqToSql at all so I see that as a plus for the EF just in case I do want to do something more complex.

Does the EF use more resources than LinqToSql so much so that I should not use it if all I need is LinqToSql-like functionality?

Update: I did some tests and my tests seems to point to Linq to Entities performing better than Linq to SQL.

I first delete 1000 records from a single table, add 1000 records, edit 1000 records and then databind them to a DataView. LinqToSQL: 5 seconds LinqToEntities: 2 seconds

I performed the same test using two joined tables and the results were similar.

My tests seem to support another post: http://stackoverflow.com/questions/257016/linq-to-sql-vs-entity-framework-performance

Update 2:

Thanks for the replies. It appears to me that Linq to Entities isn't really overkill versus Linq to SQL. After researching more I think going with Linq to Entities is the way to go. It appears to have better performance.

I believe the "overkill" statements that I've heard are made because Linq to Entities can do much more than Linq To SQL and it does require more configuration (about 1 more line in the web.config). Also there are small things that Linq to Entities does differently from Linq to SQL that might make someone feel as though Linq to Entities is more complicated. But once you learn how to do things it seems Linq to Entities is no more complicated than Linq to SQL.

flag

4 Answers

vote up 2 vote down check

My answer: Do a simple comparsion of the time taken to perform a simple Get/Edit/Update sequence. I think you will find that LINQ to SQL is twice as quick. I did a quick comparsion project when i was investigating the differences.
The results where: Entity Framework 8,700 milliseconds LINQ to SQL 3,100 milliseconds Data-sets 2,000 milliseconds

So for me it was a simple question. Use DataSets or use Linq-Sql - Entity Framework didn't even factor into it!

link text

link|flag
I finally got around to doing a test and I was surprised in the opposite way. I have no idea if my test is valid, but I first delete 1000 records, add 1000 records, edit 1000 records and then databind them to a DataView. LinqToSQL: 5 seconds LinqToEntities: 2 seconds – webdtc Dec 16 '08 at 1:29
DataSets? Ugh...There are plenty of other frameworks out there (e.g., Subsonic, NHibernate, etc.). Not to mention custom development, which I still often prefer. I have never come across a project that used DataSets that I considered even remotely clean. – senfo Dec 30 '08 at 3:08
Besides the performance test, you should also look at how much time and effort it takes you to make whatever framework do what you want. As senfo pointed out, DataSets may be fast, but they're not really that great to work with. – wizlb Feb 4 at 8:40
vote up 8 vote down

Correct me if I'm wrong, but the entity framework should only come into play when you need to transform the back-end objects, like when you're combining tables from different data sources, splitting tables, etc. It adds the entity layer so you can hide all the plumbing and just deal with your cleaned up entities. If you just use it 1 for 1 against your tables like you would in LINQ to SQL, then I'm sure that layer of complexity that you're not using will slow it down. It sounds like LINQ to SQL is the right tool for the right job in your case until you have more complex data source needs.

link|flag
LINQ to SQL is always the right tool for the right job ;-p – Svish Feb 4 at 8:52
vote up 4 vote down

Linq to SQL and Entity Framework are conceptually different beasts and you should make your choice based on how they fit your needs rather than on microbenchmarks. Even if Entity Framework was slower, it is the focus of the ADO.NET team at Microsoft and will be improved many times. Linq-to-SQL is effectively frozen.

Conceptually they are different in that Linq-to-SQL is just a way of performing database queries using Linq. Sounds obvious enough, but the point is: You are accessing the data, structured as per the database model of it. Although FKs are trasformed appropriately you still have excess objects where data was normalised into different tables. Every query you write has to cope with that kind of thing.

Entity Framework allows you to declaratively construct a layer that represents your data the way it should be represented in memory, bringing data from multiple tables into a single object where approriate; representing many-to-many relationships as collection properties, etc. And the queries you write then will be to this model and will be much cleaner and more obvious in purpose (no more 15 table joins!).

O'Reilly have a comprehensive book coming out Entity Framework on 15th Januray 2009 (preview available now on Roughcuts) if you're unsure about using Entity Framework - the MSDN documentation for it does pretty much suck at the moment which makes proposing it even harder. I do believe it's worth using in long run for all but the most trivial of projects (and personally if I was writing something trivial I'd just use ADO.NET2 directly and forget about Linq).

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

Before you dive in to Linq To SQL, check out this article by its program manager. He poses a straightforward question "Is LINQ to SQL Dead?" The answer is not as straightforward. It's definitely not "no." Sounds to me more like "probably maybe."

I would suggest before diving in to EF (now called Linq To Entities) you seriously consider NHibernate, but that's my personal bias.

link|flag
I have not used NHibernate, but a former co-worker of mine had to switch from using Linq-to-SQL to NHibernate at his new employer and he hates it. In his opinion, NHibernate is far less powerful. – Sam Schutte Nov 14 '08 at 14:51
It's one thing to say that NHibernate is far less powerful. It's another to give examples as to why. It has been my experience that most people that don't like NHibernate later change their mind after learning more about it. – senfo Dec 30 '08 at 3:10

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

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