In case I wasn't clear, I'm not saying Mike's approach is bad - it
just doesn't handle my requirements.  In general, the stuff he posts
is inline with things I've independently come up with or at least
stylistically find similar.

On Mar 7, 2:47 pm, Rob <[email protected]> wrote:
> No, but there may be multiple sets of entities in a given application
> (ie 2 datacontext types). I haven't seen Mike's full implementation,
> but I'm guessing his IDataContextProvider is just a single method with
> return new CustomerDataContext() or something similar (use the
> container with perwebrequest lifestyle to create it). If you had 2
> data context classes in your application with his approach, you'd need
> to manually configure every Repository<T> to use the appropriate
> concrete IDataContextProvider. My approach doesn't require per
> repository configuration.
>
> On Mar 7, 2:40 pm, José F. Romaniello <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
> > the same entity can be stored and retrieved from multiples datacontexts?
>
> > 2011/3/7 Rob <[email protected]>
>
> > > I've seen Mike's implementation before and it has the same issues.
> > > Notice his repository takes an IDataContextProvider. He probably has a
> > > concrete class that just returns a single data context instance,
> > > whereas I support multiple data context types in the same application.
>
> > > I think it's clear at this point that there's no built in way to
> > > handle the scenario I need.
>
> > > Thanks for all the help.
>
> > > On Mar 7, 2:25 pm, José F. Romaniello <[email protected]> wrote:
> > > > 2011/3/7 Rob <[email protected]>
>
> > > > > It's hard for me to separate out and I don't have the rights to paste
> > > > > it directly.
>
> > > > Then, you can ask the person who own the rights how to refactorize it.
>
> > > > Are you aware of any other repository pattern implementation
>
> > > > > techniques for linq to sql?
>
> > > > I've never used Linq To Sql but the first google search return a
> > > meaningful
> > > > implementation:
> > >http://mikehadlow.blogspot.com/2008/03/using-irepository-pattern-with...
> > > > IRepository<T> implemented by Repository<T>
> > > > BTW; guess what, it seems to be free!
>
> > > > To register this class the only thing you need to do is:
>
> > > Container.Register(Component.For(typeof(IRepository<>)).ImplementedBy(typeo
> > > f(Repository<>));
> > > > as i told you in one of my mails.
>
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