ADO.NET
ADO.NET includes many objects
you can use to work with data. This section introduces some of the primary
objects you will use. Over the course of this tutorial, you'll be exposed to
many more ADO.NET objects from the perspective of how they are used in a particular
lesson. The objects below are the ones you must know. Learning about them will
give you an idea of the types of things you can do with data when using
ADO.NET.
SqlCommand
The process of interacting with a database means that you must specify the actions you want to occur. This is done with a command object. You use a command object to send SQL statements to the database. A command object uses a connection object to figure out which database to communicate with. You can use a command object alone, to execute a command directly, or assign a reference to a command object to an SqlDataAdapter, which holds a set of commands that work on a group of data as described below.
SqlConnection
To interact with a database,
you must have a connection to it. The connection helps identify the database
server, the database name, user name, password, and other parameters that are
required for connecting to the data base. A connection object is used by
command objects so they will know which database to execute the command on.
SqlDataReader
Many data operations require
that you only get a stream of data for reading. The data reader object allows
you to obtain the results of a SELECT statement from a command object. For
performance reasons, the data returned from a data reader is a fast
forward-only stream of data. This means that you can only pull the data from
the stream in a sequential manner This is good for speed, but if you need to
manipulate data, then a DataSet is a better object to work with.
DataSet
DataSet objects are in-memory
representations of data. They contain multiple Datatable objects, which contain
columns and rows, just like normal database tables. You can even define
relations between tables to create parent-child relationships. The DataSet is
specifically designed to help manage data in memory and to support disconnected
operations on data, when such a scenario make sense. The DataSet is an object
that is used by all of the Data Providers, which is why it does not have a Data
Provider specific prefix.
SqlDataAdapter
Sometimes the data you work
with is primarily read-only and you rarely need to make changes to the
underlying data source Some situations also call for caching data in memory to
minimize the number of database calls for data that does not change. The data
adapter makes it easy for you to accomplish these things by helping to manage
data in a disconnected mode. The data adapter fills a DataSet object when
reading the data and writes in a single batch when persisting changes back to
the database. A data adapter contains a reference to the connection object and
opens and closes the connection automatically when reading from or writing to
the database. Additionally, the data adapter contains command object references
for SELECT, INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE operations on the data. You will have a
data adapter defined for each table in a DataSet and it will take care of all
communication with the database for you. All you need to do is tell the data
adapter when to load from or write to the database.
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