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I've just started using LINQ to SQL on a mid-sized project, and would like to increase my understanding of what advantages L2S offers.

One disadvantage I see is that it adds another layer of code, and my understanding is that it has slower performance than using stored procedures and ADO.Net. It also seems that debugging could be a challenge, especially for more complex queries, and that these might end up being moved to a stored proc anyway.

I've always wanted a way to write queries in a better development environment, are L2S queries the solution I've been looking for? Or have we just created another layer on top of SQL, and now have twice as much to worry about?

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    It's worth nothing that this is a very loaded question. Listing the advantages would be more useful if the disadvantages were also listed. All the answers here 11 years old too so take all of this information with a pinch of salt
    – Liam
    Nov 4, 2020 at 8:13

5 Answers 5

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Advantages L2S offers:

  • No magic strings, like you have in SQL queries
  • Intellisense
  • Compile check when database changes
  • Faster development
  • Unit of work pattern (context)
  • Auto-generated domain objects that are usable small projects
  • Lazy loading.
  • Learning to write linq queries/lambdas is a must learn for .NET developers.

Regarding performance:

  • Most likely the performance is not going to be a problem in most solutions. To pre-optimize is an anti-pattern. If you later see that some areas of the application are to slow, you can analyze these parts, and in some cases even swap some linq queries with stored procedures or ADO.NET.
  • In many cases the lazy loading feature can speed up performance, or at least simplify the code a lot.

Regarding debuging:

  • In my opinion debuging Linq2Sql is much easier than both stored procedures and ADO.NET. I recommend that you take a look at Linq2Sql Debug Visualizer, which enables you to see the query, and even trigger an execute to see the result when debugging.
  • You can also configure the context to write all sql queries to the console window, more information here

Regarding another layer:

  • Linq2Sql can be seen as another layer, but it is a purely data access layer. Stored procedures is also another layer of code, and I have seen many cases where part of the business logic has been implemented into stored procedures. This is much worse in my opinion because you are then splitting the business layer into two places, and it will be harder for developers to get a clear view of the business domain.
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Just a few quick thoughts.

LINQ in general

  • Query in-memory collections and out-of-process data stores with the same syntax and operators
  • A declarative style works very well for queries - it's easier to both read and write in very many cases
  • Neat language integration allows new providers (both in and out of process) to be written and take advantage of the same query expression syntax

LINQ to SQL (or other database LINQ)

  • Writing queries where you need them rather than as stored procs makes development a lot faster: there are far fewer steps involved just to get the data you want
  • Far fewer strings (stored procs, parameter names or just plain SQL) involved where typos can be irritating; the other side of this coin is that you get Intellisense for your query
  • Unless you're going to work with the "raw" data from ADO.NET, you're going to have an object model somewhere anyway. Why not let LINQ to SQL handle it for you? I rather like being able to just do a query and get back the objects, ready to use.
  • I'd expect the performance to be fine - and where it isn't, you can tune it yourself or fall back to straight SQL. Using an ORM certainly doesn't remove the need for creating the right indexes etc, and you should usually check the SQL being generated for non-trivial queries.

It's not a panacea by any means, but I vastly prefer it to either making SQL queries directly or using stored procs.

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  • Both John & Bengt pretty much say the same thing, both with excellent detail! Feb 27, 2009 at 14:53
  • Probably it is be best to implement the business logic in DB SPs (so as to utilize DB capabilities for security and performance analysis) and to use LINQ only to reduce coding while filling objects with data grabbed from SP.
    – Faiz
    Jun 14, 2012 at 13:38
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    @Faiz: On the other hand, business logic is usually considerably simpler to implement in C# than SQL, and if you only have a single access route to the data (e.g. a well-layered web service in front of the database) then you can get the best of both worlds.
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 14, 2012 at 13:41
  • Just saw the SQL Debug Visualizer. It looks like if we have to write a logic in LINQ we will have to first go and inspect how the SQL will look like and modify the LINQ code to such a point that the corresponding SQL look efficient. IMO this will kill all the time you saved not writing old fashioned ORM code..
    – Faiz
    Jun 14, 2012 at 13:53
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    @Faiz: Feel free to avoid it then. I'll continue to love it :)
    – Jon Skeet
    Jun 14, 2012 at 14:24
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I must say they are what you have been looking for. It takes some time getting used to it, but once you do you can't think of going back (at least for me). Regarding linq vs. stored procedures, you can have poor performance on either if you build it wrong. I moved to linq to sql some stored procedures of a client that were awfully coded, so the time dropped from 20secs (totally unaceptable for a web app) to < 1 sec. And much much less code then the stored procedure solution.

Update 1: Also you get a lot of flexibility, as you can limit the columns of what you are getting and it will actually only retrieve that. On the stored procedure solution you have to define a procedure for each column set you are getting, even if the underlying queries are the same.

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Just as an update, here are some links on the future of LINQ to SQL:

What is the Future of Linq to SQL

Has Microsoft confirmed their stance on LINQ to SQL end-of-life?

Is LINQ to SQL Dead or Alive?

As a comment in the last link states, LINQ to SQL isn't going to go away, just not "improved upon" at least by Microsoft. Take these comments and posts as you will, just be cautious in your development plans.

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We switched over to LINQ2Entity over the Entity Framework environment recently. Before, we had basic SQLadapters. Since the database we are working with is rather small, I cannot comment on the performance of LINQ.

I must admit though, writing queries have become a lot easier, and the addition of Entities, does enable strong typing.

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  • Johannes, I don't think strong typing is an argument for linq2entity vs. linq2sql, as it also has strong typing :) ... I am sure there are some good ones though, I limited to comparing linq2sql vs. ado.net
    – eglasius
    Feb 27, 2009 at 7:28

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