I have three tables in my sample database:
Users
- ID
- Username
- Password
Roles
- ID
- Name
- Description
UserRoles
- UserID
- RoleID
UserRoles is a lookup table to simulate a many to m开发者_开发技巧any relationship. Adding records to this table allows one to associate records in Users and Roles. My problem is that in Entity Framework it correctly interprets this as a many to many relationship and abstracts away that lookup table.
This works great most of the time, but I'm not sure what to do when I want to add/delete entries from that lookup table. I can delete roles or users but that actually deletes the objects not just their association with each other.
I do know of one option to add a dummy column to the UserRoles lookup table. That will force Entity Framework to turn the lookup table into a full-blown entity, allowing me to add and remove them as lone objects. But I have no need for a dummy column and this seems like a hack. I am looking for better suggestions.
It should look something like this:
To Remove Relationship
user.Roles.Remove(existingRoleEntity);
To Add Relationship
user.Roles.Add(existingRoleEntity);
You can use the navigation properties on the entities:
(assuming u is a User object):
using (var db = new UserEntities())
{
Role roleToRemove = db.Roles.Single(SelectRoleHere);
User user = db.Users.Single(SelectUserHere);
user.Roles.Remove(roleToRemove);
db.SaveChanges();
}
EDIT - Added SaveChanges based on Slauma's comment.
I have solved this problem before by simply adding an Private Key Identifier Auto-Increment column to the lookup table as Entity Framework
will always hide lookup tables that only contain 2 columns with foreign keys to the end tables. Sometimes you need to add a lookup entry directly yourself via Entity Framework
and this will help you achieve that.
Update From Question Author
I just wanted to provide an update on my own implementation of this answer. I added an identity column to the lookup table and created a unique key over the two foreign key columns to prevent duplicate relationship entries in the table. My model now looks like this:
http://www.codetunnel.com/content/images/ManyToManyDynamic.jpg
The only thing that sucks is to get a collection of all associated Roles I would have to do this:
List<Role> roles = new List<Role>();
foreach (UserRole userRole in myUser.UserRoles)
roles.Add(userRole.Role);
It's a little more work but unless there is an equivalent to user.Roles.Remove(role)
(something like user.Roles.Associate(existingRoleEntity)
) then this is my only option.
Update:
List<Role> roles = new List<Role>();
foreach (UserRole userRole in myUser.UserRoles)
roles.Add(userRole.Role);
Can be achieved via:
IEnumerable<int> roleIDs = myUser.UserRoles.Select(r => r.RoleID);
IEnumerable<Role> roles = Entityies.Roles.Where(r => roleIDs.Contains(r.roleID);
You can always use a public partial class to extend User
to have a property to return all roles using the above. Click the link for details of the public partial class
stuff I gave on another question.
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