3

I want to databind my DataGridView control to database through Entity model (created with model first approach), i am using EF 5.0, .NET 4.5 and winforms

My binding is organized as follows:

DataGridView->BindingSource->BindingList->EF.DbSet->Database

The result (problem) is

1) updates to existing records are working properly

2) inserts are sent up to BindingList, but they ARE NOT sent to EF.DbSet

What could be the cause for this and how can I solve this?

My code:

    //form level objects
    private BindingList<Person> persons;
    private BindingSource pSource=new BindingSource();

    private void Form1_Load(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        _context=new TestEFmodelContainer();
        var p = _context.PersonSet.ToList();
        persons = new BindingList<Person>(p); //getting bindinglist
        persons.AllowEdit = true;
        persons.AllowNew = true;

        pSource.DataSource = persons;
        pSource.AllowNew = true;

        personDataGridView.DataSource = pSource;
    }

    //"Save changes to DB" button
    private void SaveChangesToDB_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
    {
        _context.SaveChanges();
    }

1 Answer 1

3

I finally managed to solve this!

Instead of these lines:

    persons = new BindingList<Person>(p); //getting bindinglist
    ...
    pSource.DataSource = persons;

i use this line:

    pSource.DataSource = _context.Persons.Local.ToBindingList();

Where Persons is a DbSet<> from my DbContext

And one more thing that that i couldn't figure out was trying to make this work with derived EF model classes - let's say i have a BasePerson class and DerivedPerson class. EF creates DbSet only for BasePerson (that includes all derived instances, that are accessible through OfType method) I couldn't get to work .Local.ToBindingList for these derived classes.

The trick for the derived classes was to add DbSet for those Derived classes in DbContext class!

2
  • 1
    Note that calling _context.Persons.Local.ToBindingList() may add a big performance hit.
    – MCattle
    Sep 10, 2014 at 21:02
  • 1
    However, to add to that, if you're limiting the lifespan of your context (say, to that of the form) and not loading a zillion objects, you might be alright. This is something that can be determined by just keeping an eye on the performance.
    – MCattle
    Sep 11, 2014 at 21:08

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.