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Learning NHibernate 4

You're reading from   Learning NHibernate 4 Explore the full potential of NHibernate to build robust data access code

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2015
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781784393564
Length 402 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Suhas H Chatekar Suhas H Chatekar
Author Profile Icon Suhas H Chatekar
Suhas H Chatekar
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Table of Contents (13) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Introduction to NHibernate FREE CHAPTER 2. Let's Build a Simple Application 3. Let's Tell NHibernate About Our Database 4. NHibernate Warm-up 5. Let's Store Some Data into the Database 6. Let's Retrieve Some Data from the Database 7. Optimizing the Data Access Layer 8. Using NHibernate in a Real-world Application 9. Advanced Data Access Patterns 10. Working with Legacy Database 11. A Whirlwind Tour of Other NHibernate Features Index

Querying the workflow


NHibernate supports different ways of retrieving data from database. The basic semantics of writing a NHibernate query is no different than that of a standard SQL query which consists of the following three main parts:

  • You specify which tables are involved in query

  • You specify an optional filter using WHERE statement

  • You specify which columns you want to return using SELECT statement

There are other optional things you can add to a SQL query such as ordering, grouping, pagination, and so on, which is also supported by NHibernate. Queries written in NHibernate fundamentally differ from standard SQL queries on one aspect – composability. A query is represented by a query object. You can compose a query object by incrementally adding constructs such as joins with more tables, ordering, the where clauses, and so on. When you have finished building the query object, you call one of the terminal method on it, such as List<T> or First<T> which will tell NHibernate...

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