Community Convergence IV
This week we have begun an experiment by publishing on the C# Developer Center a draft of one of the specifications for Orcas. This gives you an opportunity to see and comment on a C# specification while it is still under development. If this trial works, then we will be posting more specifications in the near future. For now, you can post your comments as replies to this post.
The document we choose to start with is taken from the specification for LINQ to SQL (aka DLINQ). It describes the Mapping Format LINQ uses to translates between a class in your source code and a table in a relational database.
Suppose you want to use LINQ to access a table called Customers. Inside your C# project there needs to be either a class or an XML document that defines how the fields of the Customer table are mapped to the variables in your C# code. For instance, if a field has type int, then this specification shows the syntax you can use to define what type that field should have when it is referenced in your program.
The specification defines the rules that govern the relationship between tables and classes, and the specific syntax used to describe that relationship. It defines the format of the C# classes or XML files that allow you to use LINQ to query or update a table from inside a C# program. Both the Visual Studio IDE and a command line tool will provide mechanisms for automatically generating the classes or XML files that contain the syntax described in this specification.
What’s Hot
Anson Horton has a very interesting post on what happens when Visual Studio evaluates a function during a debug session.
I have posted the third in my series of articles on C# generics.
In a recent post, Joe Duffy has some insights into PLINQ (aka known as Parallel LINQ). This technology allows LINQ queries to automatically take advantage of machines that have multiple processors.
In regard to the previous bullet, see the eweek article entitled Microsoft PLINQ to Speed Program Execution
Don’t Miss the Lang.NET Videos
More videos are available.
Microsoft Dynamic Languages (Scripting Languages)
- IronPython went 1.0 on Sept 5, 2006
- Phalanger - PHP (not to be confused with Phalanx.)
- Ruby.Net (Queensland University of Technology, Brisbane
- RubyCLR (John Lam)
Downloads
- .NET Framework 3.0 Release Candidate
- Visual Studio 2005 SDK Version 3.0
- Visual Studio 2005 Tools for Office Second Edition Beta
Comments
- Anonymous
September 28, 2006
Welcome to the fifth Community Convergence update. This file is published on my blog, and shortly thereafter... - Anonymous
June 16, 2009
PingBack from http://topalternativedating.info/story.php?id=11003