Hi Bryan,
unfortunately, there's no quickstart guide. Not even a slowstart one :(
Basically, DbLinq exposes the same interface as Linq To SQL does.

You can use VS DBML designer, but you must use DbMetal instead of SqlMetal
to generate source file from the .dbml file (this requires a custom tool in
Visual Studio if you want to automate the build).

DbLinq is still work-in-progress: some features are still missing, some
complex expressions do not work well. Anyway, I think it is suitable for a
"reasonable use" :)

Pascal.

On Mon, Sep 22, 2008 at 20:11, bryan costanich <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>wrote:

>
> hey all,
>
> has anyone created a quickstart guide for this? i'm familiar with
> using the ms shipping LINQ to SQl stuff, but i'd like to use this for
> mySQL connectivity, but i'm not really sure where to start.
>
> can i use it with VS's linq designer? do i just build this dll and set
> it as the LINQ provider someplace? do i need the ADO.net mySQL
> connector as well?
>
> thanks,
> -b
> >
>


-- 
Pascal.

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