.NET news » Search results
Search results for query "Datagridview query" (16):
Online Article: LINQ
Gain Access To DataGridView Canned Controls
Common Table Expressions (CTE) in SQL Server 2005
Products, Customers, Orders, OrderDetails, and so on - but we may need to
run reports on a particular subset of the data or against aggregate data across these tables. Or the reporting queries we need
might need to group or filter by results returned by scalar subqueries. Typically, views are used to break down complex queries into digestible chunks or to provide scalar subquery results that can be grouped and filtered.
Views, however, are sometimes overkill, as they are permanent objects at the system-level. If we only need to reference
this complex query in a single stored procedure or UDF, another option is to use a derived
table. Unfortunately, derived tables muddle the readability of the query and must be repeated for each use in a statement..
Parallel LINQ: Running Queries On Multi-Core Processors
PLINQ is a query execution engine that accepts any LINQ-to-Objects or LINQ-to-XML query and automatically utilizes multiple processors or cores for execution when they are available. The change in programming model is tiny, meaning you don't need to be a concurrency guru to use it. In fact, threads and locks won't even come up unless you really want to dive under the hood to understand how it all works. PLINQ is a key component of Parallel FX, the next generation of concurrency support in the Microsoft .NET Framework.
In this article, we review the goals of the PLINQ technology, where it fits into the broader .NET Framework and other concurrency offerings, and what it looks like from the perspective of LINQ developers. We conclude with some example scenarios where PLINQ has already shown tremendous value...


Syndicate