I would say: ""quickly""

2010/2/23 Stephen Bohlen <[email protected]>

> Honestly, the best course is probably to just get the source, set a break
> point VERY early in the code path and run just about any of the tests that
> perform queries. You will quickly step into what you're looking for.
>
> Steve Bohlen
> [email protected]
> http://blog.unhandled-exceptions.com
> http://twitter.com/sbohlen
>
>
>
> On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 2:58 PM, George Mauer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Guys, don't get me wrong, I'm not looking to have someone do all the
>> work for me.  It's just a little hard to know where to start.  If you
>> can point me at a namespace, and let me know what concepts/design
>> patterns to look out for that should suffice (at least until I come
>> back here with a list of specific questions).
>>
>>
>> On Feb 23, 11:08 am, Shane Courtrille <[email protected]>
>> wrote:
>> > Have you considered reading the code?
>> >
>> >
>> >
>> > On Tue, Feb 23, 2010 at 9:46 AM, George Mauer <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > > Hello,
>> > > I am writing code that needs to treat the database in a database-
>> > > agnostic way.  There is no domain model per-se so I cannot use
>> > > NHibernate directly but I would like to look at how NHibernate does
>> > > it's database agnosticism and then maybe re-use that part of it.
>> >
>> > > Is there an overview somewhere specifically of this part of the
>> > > architecture?  If not, can someone help me out with understanding it?
>> >
>> > > Specifically the questions that I have at this moment are:
>> >
>> > > 1) Does NHibernate have an abstraction layer between the domain
>> > > objects and database-specific queries? Where is it and what does it
>> > > roughly look like?
>> > > 2) What exactly is the flow from an hql query to sql?
>> > > 3) What are the components that translate the abstraction to generate
>> > > the final sql?
>> > > 4) Is there a separate area where the tests for all this are located?
>>
>
>


-- 
Fabio Maulo

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