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Microsoft Azure: Enterprise Application Development

You're reading from   Microsoft Azure: Enterprise Application Development Straight talking advice on how to design and build enterprise applications for the cloud

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2010
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781849680981
Length 248 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters Close

Microsoft Azure: Enterprise Application Development
Credits
About the Authors
Acknowledgement
Acknowledgement
About the Reviewer
1. Preface
1. Introduction to Cloud Computing FREE CHAPTER 2. The Nickel Tour of Azure 3. Setting Up for Development 4. Designing our Sample Application 5. Introduction to SQL Azure 6. Azure Blob Storage 7. Azure Table Storage 8. Queue Storage 9. Web Role 10. Web Services and Azure 11. Worker Roles 12. Local Application for Updates 13. Azure AppFabric 14. Azure Monitoring and Diagnostics 15. Deploying to Windows Azure Index

DataTable "gotcha"


Our original plan was to make two different calls to the web service for the databinding of the list boxes in Chapter 12, and passing back the lists as a DataTable to the client. The beauty of WCF services is that they can accept and return a wide variety of serializable objects. At the time of writing, DataTables have been made serializable but are not yet working through WCF, though DataSets are. This is why we opted to package the DataTables into a DataSet and pass it back to the client.

There are advantages and disadvantages to doing it this way. There are two major advantages to this:

  • We need to give only one call to the client with only one returned object to use

  • Client application speed is greater with only one call

The disadvantage to this is that the total size of a DataSet with one DataTable is much bigger than the size of just the DataTable itself. The increased size could take longer to transfer and also use more bandwidth. Our example is a very small set of...

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