It's good to know I'm not crazy then :-D

Have you designed it already?
I like what you did for eager fetching (fluent extension methods on
IQueryable<T>).

   Diego


On Tue, Mar 16, 2010 at 05:43, Steve Strong <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ah, sorry, *that* sort of caching :)  I read it as caching the query plan,
> which it does.  Right now, there's no easy way to get to the
> IQuery.SetCacheable method; it's on the list and will probably make it into
> my next batch of work (later this week or early next)
>
>
> On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 8:26 PM, Diego Mijelshon 
> <[email protected]>wrote:
>
>> I must be missing something...
>>
>> If I want to cache an HQL query, I use IQuery.SetCacheable.
>> How do I SetCacheable on the IQueryable<T> returned by Query<T>?
>>
>>    Diego
>>
>>
>>
>> On Mon, Mar 15, 2010 at 13:45, Steve Strong <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Query<T> does indeed support caching, it goes through exactly the same
>>> cache as regular HQL.
>>>
>>>
>>> On Thu, Mar 11, 2010 at 7:37 PM, Diego Mijelshon <[email protected]
>>> > wrote:
>>>
>>>> Does the new Linq provider (Query<T>) support query caching?
>>>>
>>>> If not, is that planned for the 3.x release?
>>>>
>>>>    Diego
>>>>
>>>
>>>
>>
>

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