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Best Design For This
Message
From
24/03/2009 16:49:36
Mike Cole
Yellow Lab Technologies
Stanley, Iowa, United States
 
General information
Forum:
ASP.NET
Category:
Coding, syntax and commands
Miscellaneous
Thread ID:
01390847
Message ID:
01391194
Views:
61
No, I'm loading right from the DataReader to my class.

>Mike,
>
>You have mentioned a couple of times that you don't use DataSets. Do you mean that the data comes back as a DataSet, but then you load the data onto class properties, as I'm doing here?
>
>
>
>>>>>I have a customer record, which has one or more account records. Each account can have one or more invoice headers, each with one or more invoice detail records. I wrote a class for each.
>>>>>
>>>>>When I create an instance of a customer class and call LoadCustomer, should that process also create a collection of accounts on the customer class. Then, should each account create a collection of invoice headers, which in turn would create a collection of invoice details?
>>>>
>>>>I'm assuming you're talking about DataSets? This is the area where DataSets got a little fuzzy for me (I admit it's probably from my own lack of knowledge) and it why I switched to custom objects.
>>>
>>>Not necessarily DataSets. I'm pulling the customer data into a DS, but then I copy the data to properties on the class My Customer class has an Address collection, and when I load the customer's data I also load a collection of addresses. These addresses are classes with properties for the address data.
>>>
>>>The question really is: Is it a good idea to create hierarchies of classes? I have always heard "Pull what you need, need what you pull", so if I create this cascading data class hierarchy, I could end up with a bunch of data in classes that I might not use on each call.
>>
>>I'm interested on why you're taking a mixed approach (DataSets and Custom Objects). I think it's really a judgement call with Custom Classes on how far down the hierarchy you load the data. You can always perform Lazy Loading if you feel it suits your needs.
Very fitting: http://xkcd.com/386/
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