show/hide this revision's text 3 described why one might use LINQ instead of other query mechanisms

The answers given by by Jon, Jared, and yshuditelu use query-by-example which is largely unused DB4o querying mechanism, and could potentially be deprecated in the future.

The preferred methods of querying on DB4O for .NET is native queries and LINQ.

// Query for all Pilots using DB4O native query:
var result = db.Query<Pilot>();

Or alternatively using Linq-to-DB4O:

// Query for all Pilots using LINQ
var result = from Pilot p in db
             select p;

Both of these work provided you know the type (e.g. Pilot) at compile time. If you don't know the type at compile time, you can instead use a DB4O SODA query:

var query = db.Query();
query.Constrain(someObj.GetType());
var results = query.Execute();

edit Why use LINQ instead of SODA, Query-by-Example (QBE), or Native Query (NQ)? Because LINQ makes it very natural to do query expressions. For example, here's how you'd query for pilots named Michael:

var michaelPilots = from Pilot p in db
                    where p.Name == "Michael"
                    select p;

And LINQ is composable, meaning you can do things like this:

var first20MichaelPilots = michaelPilots.Take(20);

And you'll still get an efficient query executed in DB4O when you iterate over the results. Doing the same in SODA or QBE or NQ is ugly at best.

show/hide this revision's text 2 added 141 characters in body; added 295 characters in body; added 14 characters in body

Easiest way to query by type is by doing a DB4o native query:

var result = db.Query<Pilot>();

The other examples answers given by by Jon, Jared, and yshuditelu use query by example query-by-example which is largely unused DB4o querying mechanism, and may could potentially be deprecated in the future.

The preferred methods of querying on DB4O for .NET is native queries and LINQ.

// Query for all Pilots using DB4O native query:
var result = db.Query<Pilot>();

Or alternatively using Linq-to-DB4O:

// Query for all Pilots using LINQ
var result = from Pilot p in db
             select p;

Both of these work provided you know the type (e.g. Pilot) at compile time. If you don't know the type at compile time, you can instead use a DB4O SODA query:

var query = db.Query();
query.Constrain(someObj.GetType());
var results = query.Execute();
    Post Undeleted by Judah Himango
    Post Deleted by Judah Himango
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