I'm currently writing a data access layer for an application. The access layer makes extensive use of linq classes to return data. Currently in order to reflect data back to the database I've added a private data context member and a public save method. The code looks something like this:
private DataContext myDb;
public static MyClass GetMyClassById(int id)
{
DataContext db = new DataContext();
MyClass result = (from item in db.MyClasss
where item.id == id
select item).Single();
result.myDb = db;
return result;
}
public void Save()
{
db.SubmitChanges();
}
That's a gross over simplification but it gives the general idea. Is there a better way to handle that sort of pattern? Should I be instantiating a new data context every time i want to visit the db?
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