7

I have 2 simple tables and a foreign key defined in SQL Server Express:


Product

  • ProductID [auto-inc]
  • Name
  • CompanyID [not-null]

Company

  • CompanyID [auto-inc]
  • Name

FK_Product_Company

  • Product.CompanyID = Company.CompanyID

I created an ADO.NET Entity Data Model and added all the tables to it. The .edmx file shows the 1-to-many relationship in the designer. I manually populated the database with data that would make sure each product has a company. Whenever I try to access a product's company, however, it always returns null instead of an instance of a company.

For example, running the following code in C#, returns null:

var _db = new MyDBEntities();
var product = (from p in _db.Product
               where p.ProductID == 3
               select p).First();
product.Company // == null

Are there any steps I'm missing to get this to work?

Thanks


Things I have tried:


Running the following SQL, returns the company record correctly.

SELECT Company.*
FROM Product
  LEFT JOIN Company ON (Product.CompanyID = Company.CompanyID)
WHERE Product.ProductID = 3

The next thing I would do to debug this issue, would be to run the following code:

var _db = new MyDBEntities();
var product = (from p in _db.Product
               where p.ProductID == 3
               select p).First();
var company = (from c in _db.Company
               where c.CompanyID == product.CompanyID
               select c).First();

However, that does not compile because the field Product.CompanyID is hidden by the ORM generator and I don't see an option in the designer to add it.


The next best thing to run I guess is the following, and it did return a company:

var _db = new MyDBEntities();
var company = (from c in _db.Company
               where c.CompanyID == 2
               select c).First();

Just to be clear, Product with ID 3 corresponds to Company with ID 2.


I tried creating the exact same relationship using LINQ to SQL Classes and it works fine.

Of course instead of using the DB Entities class, I am using the Data Context class.

4 Answers 4

11

You need to add the .Include method to your query.

var _db = new MyDBEntities();
var product = (from p in _db.Product.Include("Company")
               where p.ProductID == 3
               select p).First();
6

Deeploading is supported by the Entity framework, but lazy loading isn't (lazy loading will be supported in Entity framework 2.0).

With Load() or .Include("Company") like the previous posts say it will work.

Here is a walkthough how you can make the entity framework lazy: http://blogs.msdn.com/jkowalski/archive/2008/05/12/transparent-lazy-loading-for-entity-framework-part-1.aspx

0
1

You can use Include as suggested above.

Alternatively try calling

product.Company.Load() to retrieve the object.

The Entity Framework uses deferred loading to avoid unnecessary queries until the object is actually required..

There is some more info about deferred loading here : http://www.code-magazine.com/article.aspx?quickid=0711051&page=4

0

Using "Include" requires string parameter which makes refactoring difficult. Better option is to mention your relation in the select clause itself:

var product = (from p in _db.Product
     where p.ProductID == 3
     select new {p.Name, Company = p.Company.Name})

As long as "Product.Company" is mentioned in the LINQ expression, EF compiler will see it and will load all columns which were mentioned. Additional benefit is that generated SQL will contain only columns you really need (less traffic)

It wont work though if you need to read-write your objects.

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