James, I believe you mean this post:
http://groups.google.com/group/fluent-nhibernate/browse_thread/thread/603a3851b4122468.
That wasn't me. I made an honest typo in this post.

On Dec 14, 4:09 pm, Ethan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Yes the above is pseudocode, however it should be
> SubClassMap<SpecialUser>, it's written incorrectly in my first post.
>
> On Dec 14, 4:06 pm, Hudson Akridge <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hoping the above is pseudocode, because you're mapping ID's as properties
> > instead of identities.
>
> > Also you've got your inheritance set up to be:
> > : SubClassMap<User>
>
> > and I believe it should be:
> > : SubClassMap<SpecialUser>
>
> > That would explain why it thinks your status property is on the base User's
> > table instead of the SpecialUser's table.
>
> > On Mon, Dec 14, 2009 at 5:59 PM, Ethan <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > I've got a set of mappings like this: public class UserMap :
> > > ClassMap<User>
> > > {
> > >    public UserMap()
> > >    {
> > >        Map(x => x.Id);
> > >        Map(x => x.Status);
> > >    }
> > > }
>
> > > public class SpecialUserMap : SubClassMap<User>
> > > {
> > >    public SpecialUserMap()
> > >    {
> > >        Map(x => x.Property);
> > >    }
> > > }
>
> > > public class DirectoryMap : ClassMap<Directory>
> > > {
> > >    public DirectoryMap
> > >    {
> > >        Map(x => x.Id);
> > >        HasMany(x => x.SpecialUsers).Where("Status = 0");
> > >    }
> > > }
>
> > > where User is a join map, and SpecialUser joins against it to get
> > > things like Status. I can't get the DirectoryMap to work, since
> > > accessing Directory's SpecialUsers collection causes a "undefined
> > > column Status" error, as NHibernate can't figure out that the Status
> > > column comes from the User table, and not the SpecialUser table.
> > > Is there a way to manually tell NHibernate which column to look at?
>
> > > Another possible solution I thought of is to throw a subselect SQL
> > > statement into the Where clause, but NHibernate tends to do this:
>
> > > Where("SELECT u.Status FROM User WHERE u.Id = Id) generates select
> > > <columns> from [SpecialUser] specialuse0_ inner join [User]
> > > specialuse0_1_ on <id = id> WHERE (SELECT u.Status FROM
> > > specialuse0_.Status = 0)
>
> > > Basically it treats my variables as columns from the SpecialUser
> > > table, and inserts specialuse0_ into the SQL instead.
> > > If there is a way to make NHibernate not touch the SQL inserted in the
> > > Where clause that might be a possible solution (albeit not a good one)
> > > as well.
>
> > > --
>
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>
> > --
> > - Hudsonhttp://www.bestguesstheory.comhttp://twitter.com/HudsonAkridge

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