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I use the following one (courtesy of Sameera Perera)

using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.Common;

namespace Providers.nsDb
{
  //comm -- / <summary>
  //comm -- / Abstract base class for encapsulating provider independant database interactin logic. 
  //comm -- / </summary>
  //comm -- / <typeparam name="CONNECTION_TYPE"><see cref="DbConnection"/> derived Connection type.</typeparam>
  //comm -- / <typeparam name="COMMAND_TYPE"><see cref="DbCommand"/> derived Command type.</typeparam>
  //comm -- / <typeparam name="ADAPTER_TYPE"><see cref="DbDataAdapater"/> derived Data Adapter type.</typeparam>
  public abstract
      class AbstractDatabase<CONNECTION_TYPE, COMMAND_TYPE, ADAPTER_TYPE> : IDisposable
    where CONNECTION_TYPE : DbConnection, new ()
    where COMMAND_TYPE : DbCommand
    where ADAPTER_TYPE : DbDataAdapter, new ()
  {
    #region : Connection :

    //comm -- / <summary>Gets the Connection object associated with the current instance.</summary>
    public DbConnection Connection
    {
      get
      {
        if (internal_currentConnection == null)
        {
          internal_currentConnection = new CONNECTION_TYPE ();
          // - Enable to measure the connection //Providers.nsDbMeta.DbDebugger.WriteIf ( ref userObj , "GetConnectionString START" );
          internal_currentConnection.ConnectionString = GetConnectionString ();
          // - Enable to measure the connection Providers.nsDbMeta.DbDebugger.WriteIf ( ref userObj , "GetConnectionString END" );
        }
        return internal_currentConnection;
      }
    }
    private DbConnection internal_currentConnection;

    //comm -- / <summary>When overridden in derived classes returns the connection string for the database.</summary>
    //comm -- / <returns>The connection string for the database.</returns>
    protected abstract string GetConnectionString ();

    #endregion

    #region : Commands :

    //comm -- / <summary>Gets a DbCommand object with the specified <see cref="DbCommand.CommandText"/>.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="sqlString">The SQL string.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>A DbCommand object with the specified <see cref="DbCommand.CommandText"/>.</returns>
    public DbCommand GetSqlStringCommand ( string sqlString )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      DbCommand cmd = this.Connection.CreateCommand ();
      cmd.CommandType = CommandType.Text;
      cmd.CommandText = sqlString;
      return cmd;
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Gets a DbCommand object with the specified <see cref="DbCommand.CommandText"/>.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="sqlStringFormat">The SQL string format.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="args">The format arguments.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>A DbCommand object with the specified <see cref="DbCommand.CommandText"/>.</returns>
    public DbCommand GetSqlStringCommand ( string sqlStringFormat, params object[] args )
    {
      return GetSqlStringCommand ( string.Format ( sqlStringFormat, args ) );
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Gets a DbCommand object for the specified Stored Procedure.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="storedProcName">The name of the stored procedure.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>A DbCommand object for the specified Stored Procedure.</returns>
    public DbCommand GetStoredProcedureCommand ( string storedProcName )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      DbCommand cmd = this.Connection.CreateCommand ();
      cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;
      cmd.CommandText = storedProcName;
      return cmd;
    }

    #region : Parameters :

    //comm -- / <summary>Adds an input parameter to the given <see cref="DbCommand"/>.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command object the parameter should be added to.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="paramName">The identifier of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="paramType">The type of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="value">The value of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>The <see cref="DbParameter"/> that was created.</returns>
    public DbParameter AddInParam ( DbCommand cmd, string paramName, DbType paramType, object value )
    {
      DbParameter param = cmd.CreateParameter ();
      param.DbType = paramType;
      param.ParameterName = paramName;
      param.Value = value;
      param.Direction = ParameterDirection.Input;
      cmd.Parameters.Add ( param );
      return param;
    } //eof method AddInParam

    //comm -- / <summary>Adds an input parameter to the given <see cref="DbCommand"/>.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command object the parameter should be added to.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="paramName">The identifier of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="paramType">The type of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="size">The maximum size in bytes, of the data table column to be affected.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="value">The value of the parameter.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>The <see cref="DbParameter"/> that was created.</returns>
    public DbParameter AddInParam ( DbCommand cmd, string paramName, DbType paramType, int size, object value )
    {
      DbParameter param = cmd.CreateParameter ();
      param.DbType = paramType;
      param.ParameterName = paramName;
      param.Size = size;
      param.Value = value;
      param.Direction = ParameterDirection.Input;
      //Providers.nsDbMeta.DbDebugger.WriteIf ( ref userObj , "Adding IN param " + value.ToString ( ) );
      cmd.Parameters.Add ( param );
      return param;
    }

    public DbParameter AddInOutParam ( DbCommand cmd, string paramName, DbType paramType, int size, object value )
    {
      DbParameter param = cmd.CreateParameter ();
      param.DbType = paramType;
      param.ParameterName = paramName;
      param.Size = size;
      param.Value = value;
      param.Direction = ParameterDirection.Output;
      cmd.Parameters.Add ( param );
      //debug if needed here 
      return param;
    }


    public DbParameter AddInOutParam ( DbCommand cmd, string paramName, DbType paramType, object value )
    {
      DbParameter param = cmd.CreateParameter ();
      param.DbType = paramType;
      param.ParameterName = paramName;
      param.Value = value;
      param.Direction = ParameterDirection.Output;
      cmd.Parameters.Add ( param );
      return param;
    }

    #endregion

    #region : Executes :

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public int ExecuteNonQuery ( DbCommand cmd )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      return cmd.ExecuteNonQuery ();
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="txn">The database transaction inside which the command should be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public int ExecuteNonQuery ( DbCommand cmd, DbTransaction txn )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      cmd.Transaction = txn;
      return cmd.ExecuteNonQuery ();
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public DbDataReader ExecuteReader ( DbCommand cmd )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      return cmd.ExecuteReader ();
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <param name="behavior">One of the <see cref="System.Data.CommandBehavior"/> values.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public DbDataReader ExecuteReader ( DbCommand cmd, CommandBehavior behavior )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      return cmd.ExecuteReader ( behavior );
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public T ExecuteScalar<T> ( DbCommand cmd, T defaultValue )
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();

      object retVal = cmd.ExecuteScalar ();
      if (null == retVal || DBNull.Value == retVal)
        return defaultValue;
      else
        return (T)retVal;
    }

    //comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    //comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    //comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    public DataSet ExecuteDataSet ( DbCommand cmd )
    {
      ADAPTER_TYPE adapter = new ADAPTER_TYPE ();
      adapter.SelectCommand = (COMMAND_TYPE)cmd;


      DataSet retVal = new DataSet ();
      adapter.Fill ( retVal );
      return retVal;
    }

    ////comm -- / <summary>Executes the specified command against the current connection.</summary>
    ////comm -- / <param name="cmd">The command to be executed.</param>
    ////comm -- / <returns>Result returned by the database engine.</returns>
    //public DataSet ExecuteDataSet(DbCommand cmd )
    //{
    //  ADAPTER_TYPE adapter = new ADAPTER_TYPE();
    //  adapter.SelectCommand = (COMMAND_TYPE)cmd;
    //  //cmd.CommandTimeout = 3600
    //  DataSet retVal = new DataSet();
    //  adapter.Fill(retVal);
    //  return retVal;
    //}

    #endregion

    #endregion

    //comm -- / <summary>Begins a transaction.</summary>
    //comm -- / <returns>Created transaction.</returns>
    public DbTransaction BeginTransaction ()
    {
      if (this.Connection.State != ConnectionState.Open)
        this.Connection.Open ();
      return Connection.BeginTransaction ();
    }

    #region : Construction / Destruction :

    //comm -- / <summary>Disposes the resources associated with the current database connection.</summary>
    ~AbstractDatabase ()
    {
      Dispose ();
    }

    #region IDisposable Members

    //comm -- / <summary>Disposes the resources associated with the current database connection.</summary>
    public void Dispose ()
    {
      if (null != internal_currentConnection)
      {
        internal_currentConnection.Close ();
        internal_currentConnection.Dispose ();
        internal_currentConnection = null;
      }
    }

    #endregion

    #endregion

  } //eof public abstract class AbstractDatabase
} //eof namespace Providers.nsDb
flag

I think you should simply post a link to the public page that shows this code rather than copying it here. The original author (whom you have commendably mentioned) may not be interested in public dissemination of his code. – Cerebrus Apr 18 at 6:48
@Jason even though the question is subjective in nature, seeing the code posted I think the actual answer is use ORMs or home baked, not much more to it. And for ORMs there is a question stackoverflow.com/questions/249550/… which, ironically, isn't CW. – Freddy Rios Apr 18 at 7:19

closed as exact duplicate by Jason Coco, DJ, Cerebrus, Rob, Jeff Atwood Apr 18 at 7:34

3 Answers

vote up 0 vote down

I use Typed Data Set. Typed DataSets gives you typed representations of each table and table-fields within. I've gained tremendous performance boost using Typed DataSets over untyped one. Moreover I just have to change the Connection string in Web.config in case if the database provider changes. Typed DataSets Rock!

link|flag
I think typed Datasets suck! Better to roll your own implementation or use an ORM tool. – Cerebrus Apr 18 at 7:06
Typed Datasets and ORM are completely different topics. Typed DataSets are just another way of accessing Database wherein ORM are on top of Data Access wrappers. Question is regarding Data Access Wrappers not the ORM. – curious_geek Apr 18 at 9:36
vote up 2 vote down

My own home-baked, self-created, hand-typed DAL.

And that's final.

link|flag
Is it "closed source" and if not could you provide a link to it ? – YordanGeorgiev Apr 18 at 6:53
No, its not closed source, but the point I'm trying to make is that your question is too subjective. (which explains why some people have downvoted it). I have, however, voted to close it. – Cerebrus Apr 18 at 6:56
1  
The wrapper I provided is rather concrete and real ... You could find examples of how-to utilize it from the link I provided I have found here questions such as "What are the hidden features of C# ?" or "How does programming affect you every day life ..." which seem to me like more subjective than this question ... – YordanGeorgiev Apr 18 at 7:04
1  
The first question ("hidden features of C#") is a great factual question. The second one, however, is admittedly subjective. The community decides in the end what should be closed and what should not. – Cerebrus Apr 18 at 7:09
Questions like that, are marked as community wiki, since they are to collect information and not something specific with a direct answer. CW doesn't gives reputation, because of the very same reason. – Freddy Rios Apr 18 at 7:12
show 1 more comment
vote up 2 vote down

Use ORMs i.e. linqtosql, nhibernate, entity framework.

See this question: what-orm-frameworks-for-net-do-you-like-best

Update: I also suggest to look for information about the repository pattern.

link|flag
I agree - ORM is my choice of database "wrapper" :) As far as I know, linqTosql is "dead", and will be put to sleep by MS soon, while entity framework is going to be their "get it right" in ORM. – Israr Khan Apr 18 at 7:41
@Israr regarding linqtosql being dead, check this: stackoverflow.com/questions/653019/… ... if everyone keeps repeating it, we might make it truth :( - I really like linqtosql so that's something I wouldn't want – Freddy Rios Apr 18 at 7:51

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