In the previous post we established that the usage of default constructor required by NHibernate is theoretically not required. The fact that NHibernate does use them though has to do with technical limitations of CLR. Turns out in most cases there is a workaround, which is not perfect but was a fun...
One of the first things you learn about NHibernate is that in order for it to be able construct your instances and take advantage of lazy loading every persistent class must have the default, parameterless constructor. This leads to having entities looking like this (standard blog with posts and comments...
Easy and Instant deployments and instant scale for .NET? Awhile back a few of us were looking at Ruby Gems as the answer to package management for .NET . The gems platform supported the concept of DLLs as packages although some changes would have needed to happen to have long term use for the entire...
Posted to
Rob Reynolds - The Fervent Coder
by
Rob Reynolds
on 02-16-2011
Filed under: NHibernate, Fluent NHibernate, RoundhousE, HowTo, UppercuT, Development, Git, Tools, .NET, Agile, Gems, Challenge
Imagine we are awhile into the future. How do you get open source releases down to your project so that you can use them? How do you get the products down to your computer so that you can use them? Is it easier or harder than the way we’ve always done it before? The Past and Present Before we can go...
Day eight* of the port and I was so happy not to discover any new issues. At this point I have almost all the major UI pieces in place. You can now see what you would normally during typical profiler usage. There’s still a lot of work to be done…probably much more than has been done so far...
Posted to
.NET & Funky Fresh
by
Rob Eisenberg
on 04-09-2010
Filed under: WPF, Xaml, Control Templates, WPF/e, .NET 3.5, Caliburn, Featured, Silverlight, NHibernate, RIA, MVVM, UI Architecture, NHProf