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Is it a good idea to store my SQL queries in a global resource file instead of having it in my codebehind? I know stored procedures would be a better solution but I don't have that luxury on this project.

I don't want queries all over my pages and thought a central repository would be a better idea.

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4 Answers

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Resource files are usually used for localization. But a string is just a string is just a string, and do you really want to be sending any old string in a resource file to your database?

I completely agree with others that you should be using linq or typed datasets, etc. Personally I've only had to resort to text queries a handful of times over the years, and when I do it's usually something like the following:

You set up a small framework and then all you need to do is maintain an Xml file. An single specific xml file is a lot easier to manage and deploy than a resource dll. You also have a well known place (repository) that stores Sql Queries and some metadata about them versus just some naming convention.

Never underestimate the utility of a (simple) class over a string literal. Once you've started using the class you can then add things down the road that you can't (easily) do with just a simple string.


Notepad compiler, so apologies if this isn't 100%. It's just a sketch of how everything interacts.

public static class SqlResource
{
    private static Dictionary<string,SqlQuery> dictionary;

    public static Initialize(string file)
    {
        List<SqlQuery> list;

        // deserialize the xml file
        using (StreamReader streamReader = new StreamReader(file))
        {
            XmlSerializer deserializer = new XmlSerializer(typeof(List<SqlQuery>));
            list = (List<SqlQuery>)deserializer.Deserialize(streamReader);
        }
        dictionary = new Dictionary<string,SqlQuery>();
        foreach(var item in list )
        {
            dictionary.Add(item.Name,item);
        }
    }
    public static SqlQuery GetQueryByName(string name)
    {
        SqlQuery query = dictionary[name];

        if( query == null )
            throw new ArgumentException("The query '" + name + "' is not valid.");

        if( query.IsObsolete )
        {
           // TODO - log this.
        }
        return query;

    }
}

public sealed class SqlQuery
{
    [XmlAttributeAttribute("name")]
    public bool Name { get; set; }

    [XmlElement("Sql")]
    public bool Sql { get; set; }

    [XmlAttributeAttribute("obsolete")]
    public bool IsObSolete { get; set; }

    [XmlIgnore]
    public TimeSpan Timeout { get; set;}

    /// <summary>
    /// Serialization only - XmlSerializer can't serialize normally
    /// </summary>
    [XmlAttribute("timeout")]
    public string Timeout_String 
    {
        get { return Timeout.ToString();  }
        set { Timeout = TimeSpan.Parse(value); } 
    }
}

your xml file might look like

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<ArrayOfSqlQuery xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xmlns:xsd="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema">
    <SqlQuery name="EmployeeByEmployeeID" timeout="00:00:30" >
      <Sql>
SELECT * From Employee WHERE EmployeeID = @T0     
      </Sql>
    </SqlQuery>
    <SqlQuery name="EmployeesForManager" timeout="00:05:00" obsolete="true" >
      <Sql>
SELECT * From Employee WHERE ManagerID = @T0      
      </Sql>
    </SqlQuery>
</ArrayOfSqlQuery>
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I would look up strongly typed datasets with tableadapters and let the tableadapters handle all queries. When you are used with it you'll never go back.

Just add a dataset to your solution, add a connection, and a tableadapter for a table, then start build all querys (update, select, delete, search and so on) and handle it easy in code behind.

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Most of my data access is through SubSonic and is strongly typed. However, I sometimes have very complex queries that need to be written out. – Arthur Chaparyan Nov 6 '08 at 22:41
ok. Im not familiar with Subsonic so im lost there. ;) – Stefan Nov 6 '08 at 22:53
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Ok, I'll try to answer again, now when I have more information.

I would make a query-class that hold all querystrings as shared properties or functions that could be named quite well to be easy to use.

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I am in the same situation with some developers preferring to write the queries in the resource file. We are using subsonic and I would prefer to use stored procedures rather then using direct queries.

One option, even though it is bad is to place those queries in a config file and read when needed but this is a very bad option and we may use it if everyone cannot be agreement of using the stored procedures.

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