2

This is not another question concerning how to create a Many To Many relationship, but rather, how to actually take control of the entity that maps the relationship?

For example... Many to many relationship between table Product and table Supplier.

I need a SupplierProduct that has columns specific to a product+supplier combination.

class SupplierProduct {
    public int SupplierId { get; set; }
    public int ProductId { get; set; }

    // additional properties specific to a S+P combo: 
    public bool IsProductAssembled { get; set; }
}

Some suppliers assemble, others don't. If I have such a class, how can I use it in place of the default EF many-to-many table that it creates?

4
  • I'm not sure that can be done with EF. Then, how would you access the IsProductAssembled property since the mapping table is only used to join your entities together. However, with the SupplierProduct class you're having, can't you just configure two one-to-many relationships? A Product can have multiple SupplierProduct , and a Supplier can have many SupplierProduct.
    – JLe
    Oct 25, 2013 at 20:19
  • That's a different way of thinking about it. It sounds good. I'll try it out. Just to be clear: you are saying drop the mapping table altogether (as in remove the collections from the code first classes so EF doesn't auto create a mapping table.)? Oct 25, 2013 at 22:05
  • Yes, I made an answer clarifying that part.
    – JLe
    Oct 25, 2013 at 22:10
  • This happens a lot. You have a many to many relationship, then you realise there is an attribute on that relationship and you have to promote it to an entity in its own right. stackoverflow.com/questions/19171514/…
    – Colin
    Oct 26, 2013 at 7:17

1 Answer 1

2

Use your SupplierProduct class as relation instead:

class SupplierProduct {
    public int SupplierId { get; set; }
    public int ProductId { get; set; }

    // additional properties specific to a S+P combo: 
    public bool IsProductAssembled { get; set; }
}

class Product {
    // ... lot of properties

    // Link all the suppliers of this products
    public IList<SupplierProduct> Suppliers { get; set; }
}    

class Supplier {
    // ... lot of properties

    // Link all the product this supplier supplies
    public IList<SupplierProduct> Products { get; set; }
}

Then, configure Product to have a lot of Suppliers and Supplier to have a lot of Products. No direct relation between Product and Supplier anymore.

Configure the model binder:

modelBuilder.Entity<Product>()
    .HasMany<SupplierProduct>(p => p.Suppliers)
    .WithRequired();

modelBuilder.Entity<Supplier>()
    .HasMany<SupplierProduct>(s => s.Products)
    .WithRequired();
1
  • would you please extend your answer? especially this part: Then, configure Product to have a lot of Suppliers and Supplier to have a lot of Products. No direct relation between Product and Supplier anymore.. and how SupplierProductwould be defined. Nov 20, 2013 at 17:56

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