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I'm building an ORM using Entity Frameworks 4.0 (CTP5) in the Model-First pattern. A few of my entities have complex (object tree) properties that don't need to be ORM entities - they're only of interest to back-end server systems that use this database, not to the clients that use this database.

I could just serialize the property's object tree down to a string and store it in the DB as a string, but the SQL Server XML data type is really appealing. To be able to query over the XML data contents in an intelligent manner would be very nice.

However, I don't see any way to specify that I want an XML data type in the Visual Studio Entity Modeler.

Is the only way to get this done to specify string fields in the model, emit the DDL, then modify the DDL to change the string fields to XML fields? That seems awfully brittle and write-once, change never. Is there a better way?

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2 Answers 2

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In "Entity Framework 4.0 Recipes", Larry Tenny and Zeeshan Hirani state that XML data types are simply not supported by EF 4.0.

They do offer a workaround, which is to make the string type property on the entity class generated by the model private and create a new property (in your own partial class of the entity class) to return an XElement from the internal string property:

public partial class Candidate
{
    private XElement candidateResume = null;

    public XElement CandidateResume
    {
        get 
        {
            if (candidateResume == null)
            {
                candidateResume = XElement.Parse(this.Resume);
                candidateResume.Changed += (s,e) =>
                {
                    this.Resume = candidateResume.ToString();
                }
            }

            return candidateResume;
        }

        set
        {
            candidateResume = value;
            candidateResume.Changed += (s,e) =>
            {
                this.Resume = candidateResume.ToString();
            }
            this.Resume = value.ToString();
        }
    }
}

Creating a shadow property of the desired XML type like this should work, but the conversion between string and XML on every change of the original string property (Resume) and the new shadow property (CandidateResume) is pretty expensive.

If anyone has any better ideas, I'm still open to suggestions.

0

I've found a way to mask the fact that Entity Framework maps the XML-property to a String-property, by using a hidden complex-type. Although this requires you to modify each affected entity before saving it in the database. Roughly I utilize the fact that Entity Framework allows you the specify internal types in your .csdl file.

I've describes my approach in a bit detail here: .net ORM Comparison

I also just installed the CTP5 to take a look at the code-first approach, to see if the same approach can be used without having an .edmx or .csdl file. I will edit this answer if I've found another way.

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  • I've had no luck in my first attemp. Simple because I couldn't figure out how to work with complex type directly. If you could show me what you got so far or which code-first approach you're taking (I got confused with DbContext, DbSet etc.), I might just "hook" into it.
    – J. Tihon
    Mar 2, 2011 at 23:55

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