I have what should be an easy question but I have been unable to find the answer myself.
I am using EF4 CTP-5 Code First Model with hand generated POCOs. It is proc
Before EF 4.1, you could use conventions and add the following convention to your ModelBuilder:
using System;
using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration.Configuration.Properties.Primitive;
using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration.Conventions.Configuration;
using System.Reflection;
public class MakeAllStringsNonUnicode :
IConfigurationConvention<PropertyInfo, StringPropertyConfiguration>
{
public void Apply(PropertyInfo propertyInfo,
Func<StringPropertyConfiguration> configuration)
{
configuration().IsUnicode = false;
}
}
(Taken from http://blogs.msdn.com/b/adonet/archive/2011/01/10/ef-feature-ctp5-pluggable-conventions.aspx)
UPDATE: Pluggable conventions were dropped for the 4.1 release. Check my blog for an alternative approach)
I extended Marc Cals' answer (and Diego's blog post) to globally set all strings on all entities as non-unicode as per the question, rather than having to call it manually per-class. See below.
/// <summary>
/// Change the "default" of all string properties for a given entity to varchar instead of nvarchar.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="modelBuilder"></param>
/// <param name="entityType"></param>
protected void SetAllStringPropertiesAsNonUnicode(
DbModelBuilder modelBuilder,
Type entityType)
{
var stringProperties = entityType.GetProperties().Where(
c => c.PropertyType == typeof(string)
&& c.PropertyType.IsPublic
&& c.CanWrite
&& !Attribute.IsDefined(c, typeof(NotMappedAttribute)));
foreach (PropertyInfo propertyInfo in stringProperties)
{
dynamic propertyExpression = GetPropertyExpression(propertyInfo);
MethodInfo entityMethod = typeof(DbModelBuilder).GetMethod("Entity");
MethodInfo genericEntityMethod = entityMethod.MakeGenericMethod(entityType);
object entityTypeConfiguration = genericEntityMethod.Invoke(modelBuilder, null);
MethodInfo propertyMethod = entityTypeConfiguration.GetType().GetMethod(
"Property", new Type[] { propertyExpression.GetType() });
StringPropertyConfiguration property = (StringPropertyConfiguration)propertyMethod.Invoke(
entityTypeConfiguration, new object[] { propertyExpression });
property.IsUnicode(false);
}
}
private static LambdaExpression GetPropertyExpression(PropertyInfo propertyInfo)
{
var parameter = Expression.Parameter(propertyInfo.ReflectedType);
return Expression.Lambda(Expression.Property(parameter, propertyInfo), parameter);
}
/// <summary>
/// Return an enumerable of all DbSet entity types in "this" context.
/// </summary>
/// <param name="a"></param>
/// <returns></returns>
private IEnumerable<Type> GetEntityTypes()
{
return this
.GetType().GetProperties()
.Where(a => a.CanWrite && a.PropertyType.IsGenericType && a.PropertyType.GetGenericTypeDefinition() == typeof(DbSet<>))
.Select(a => a.PropertyType.GetGenericArguments().Single());
}
Finally, call it from your OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder):
foreach (var entityType in GetEntityTypes())
SetAllStringPropertiesAsNonUnicode(modelBuilder, entityType);
With Diego's blog help, to make the public properties of a POCO varchar without using anotations is :
private void SetStringPropertiesAsNonUnicode<e>(DbModelBuilder _modelBuilder) where e:class
{
//Indiquem a totes les propietats string que no són unicode per a que es crein com a varchar
List<PropertyInfo> stringProperties = typeof(e).GetProperties().Where(c => c.PropertyType == typeof(string) && c.PropertyType.IsPublic).ToList();
foreach (PropertyInfo propertyInfo in stringProperties)
{
dynamic propertyExpression = GetPropertyExpression(propertyInfo);
_modelBuilder.Entity<e>().Property(propertyExpression).IsUnicode(false);
}
}
// Edit: Also stole this from referenced blog post (Scott)
static LambdaExpression GetPropertyExpression(PropertyInfo propertyInfo)
{
var parameter = Expression.Parameter(propertyInfo.ReflectedType);
return Expression.Lambda(Expression.Property(parameter, propertyInfo), parameter);
}
Here is a project from Sergey Barskiy that extends EF to allow custom conventions, which as a result, you can make custom attributes instead of the fluent API.
Here is a code snippet from here that demonstrates the utility in action.
What you don't see here is the decimal precision attribute and others. So per your question, once you set Unicode to false, it should be varchar
as opposed to nvarchar
.
public class Product
{
public int ProductId { get; set; }
[Indexed("Main", 0)]
public string ProductNumber { get; set; }
[Indexed("Main", 1)]
[Indexed("Second", direction: IndexDirection.Ascending)]
[Indexed("Third", direction: IndexDirection.Ascending)]
public string ProductName { get; set; }
[String(4, 12, false)] //minLength, maxLength, isUnicode
public string Instructions { get; set; }
[Indexed("Third", 1, direction: IndexDirection.Descending)]
public bool IsActive { get; set; }
[Default("0")]
public decimal? Price { get; set; }
[Default("GetDate()")]
public DateTime? DateAdded { get; set; }
[Default("20")]
public int Count { get; set; }
}
Read this and this for detail.