I hate to be a kill joy.

In the last 4 years I've used EF twice, nhibernate 3 times and even against my 
recomendations we end up 6 months down the line with a hybrid that uses 
straight ado.net connections for the time critical parts and EF / Nhibernate 
for the simple object loading.  

I was a huge nhibernate fan but now when I hear that an object persistance 
framework is a requirement of a project I start planning my exit  for 6 months 
later.

Davy.
"When all you have is a hammer, every problem looks like a nail." I feel much 
the same way about xml

-----Original Message-----
From: "Greg Keogh" <[email protected]>
Sender: [email protected]
Date: Tue, 1 Feb 2011 09:01:27 
To: 'ozDotNet'<[email protected]>
Reply-To: ozDotNet <[email protected]>
Subject: RE: EF4 custom views

I've ordered the other book on EF4 that was mentioned yesterday. After
reading the Learman book for many weeks, I find when I sit down to code that
the very first seemingly simple and fundamental thing I want to do is
obscure or impossible. The books and magazine articles never prepare you for
what will happen in a real app.

EF4 has shocking up-front difficulty barrier to using it in a serious app.
It seems that you need a PhD in EF4ology before you can get started.

If and when I eventually do get EF4 working to my satisfaction I will report
on it, and I'll report on the two EF4 books.

It's not Friday, but as an aside: You are the only second person I have ever
heard use the word 'greenfields'. A colleague used it two days ago and I
thought he was talking about a company called Green Fields. Is this another
Americanism creeping into our language? Or is it from some other discipline?
My current pet hate is the word "impacts". My latest IT books (including
Lerman's) are using it everywhere in sentences like "setting this option
will impact performance". Will the word "affect" be deprecated from the
English language? Even the ABC news and local newspapers are now reporting
how "this will impact that". I'm surprised I can't hear all of these
collisions.

I'll have to dogfood the impact and architect a solution before we verbize
anymore nouns.

Greg

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