Hi Alexander,

Yes, we did perform some work to provide LiNQ2RDF support for Virtuoso which 
was committed to the project  in 2008, see:

        http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/Whitepapers/html/linqtordf/linqtordf1.htm

I thought you were more interested in EF support which I why I did not include 
it along with the dotnetRDF project link which is more recent ...

Best Regards
Hugh Williams
Professional Services
OpenLink Software
Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
Support: http://support.openlinksw.com
Forums: http://boards.openlinksw.com/support
Twitter: http://twitter.com/OpenLink

On 5 Jan 2010, at 12:55, Alexander Sidorov wrote:

> Hi High,
> 
> Thank you for dotnetRDF link: I didn't know about this framework before. I 
> have also found one more .NET framework with Virtuoso support - LINQ2RDF. Now 
> I'm choosing which of them to use.
> 
> Regards,
> Alexander
> 
> 2010/1/3 Hugh Williams <[email protected]>
> Hi Alexander,
> 
> The walk-throughs provide sample applications of various methods for querying 
> the Virtuoso RDF & SQL stores in .Net using both the ADO.Net Provider and 
> HTTP.  The Entity Framework samples require a SQL/relational mapping and 
> creating a SQL View of the  RDF SPARQL query seems the obvious way of doing 
> this.
> 
> Have you looked at the dotnetRDF project which provides an RDF library for 
> .Net and supports Virtuoso as detailed at:
> 
>       
> http://www.dotnetrdf.org/content.asp?pageID=Using%20Virtuoso%20Universal%20Server
> 
> This may be more what you are looking for ...
> 
> Best Regards
> Hugh Williams
> Professional Services
> OpenLink Software
> Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
> Support: http://support.openlinksw.com
> Forums: http://boards.openlinksw.com/support
> Twitter: http://twitter.com/OpenLink
> 
> On 2 Jan 2010, at 22:35, Alexander Sidorov wrote:
> 
>> Hi, Hugh!
>> 
>> These examples demonstrate RDF-store access by EF using Views. But I would 
>> like some more dynamic way: I don't like the idea of creating a view for 
>> every query. The one dynamic example in that list called "Creating 
>> Silverlight Application for Browsing RDF Data" doesn't use EF at all: it 
>> uses SPARQL through http.
>> 
>> So are there any means for dynamic RDF-store querying from .NET except nake 
>> http? I have the only idea about using Jena or Sesame converted with 
>> IKVM.NET, but may be there are some other options?
>> 
>> Regards,
>> Alexander
>> 
>> 2010/1/3 Hugh Williams <[email protected]>
>> Hi Alexander,
>> 
>> There are a number of  "Sample Walk-through Application" examples on 
>> accessing using the Virtuoso ADO.Net Provider for accessing the RDF-store 
>> via various methods, in the documentation at:
>> 
>>        
>> http://virtuoso.openlinksw.com/dataspace/dav/wiki/Main/VirtAdoNet35Provider
>> 
>> I hope his is what you are looking for ...
>> 
>> Best Regards
>> Hugh Williams
>> Professional Services
>> OpenLink Software
>> Web: http://www.openlinksw.com
>> Support: http://support.openlinksw.com
>> Forums: http://boards.openlinksw.com/support
>> Twitter: http://twitter.com/OpenLink
>> 
>> On 2 Jan 2010, at 16:33, Alexander Sidorov wrote:
>> 
>> > Hello!
>> >
>> > Are there any examples of using Virtuoso provider for accessing 
>> > non-relational sources (I am especially in accessing RDF-store)?
>> >
>> > Regards,
>> > Alexander
>> > ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
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>> 
>> 
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>> [email protected]
>> https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/virtuoso-users
> 
> 
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