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ThisThis certainly is one. It advocates a far too common approach to not-supported methods in LINQ to a SQL backend: fetch the whole shebang into memory and do the not supported stuff there.

It's a last (and then valid) resort if everything else fails, but usually it's turned to too easily.

The 9 downvotes (and not a single upvote) clearly drive the message home. Except for the OP...

This certainly is one. It advocates a far too common approach to not-supported methods in LINQ to a SQL backend: fetch the whole shebang into memory and do the not supported stuff there.

It's a last (and then valid) resort if everything else fails, but usually it's turned to too easily.

The 9 downvotes (and not a single upvote) clearly drive the message home. Except for the OP...

This certainly is one. It advocates a far too common approach to not-supported methods in LINQ to a SQL backend: fetch the whole shebang into memory and do the not supported stuff there.

It's a last (and then valid) resort if everything else fails, but usually it's turned to too easily.

The 9 downvotes (and not a single upvote) clearly drive the message home. Except for the OP...

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Gert Arnold
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This certainly is one. It advocates a far too common approach to not-supported methods in LINQ to a SQL backend: fetch the whole shebang into memory and do the not supported stuff there.

It's a last (and then valid) resort if everything else fails, but usually it's turned to too easily.

The 9 downvotes (and not a single upvote) clearly drive the message home. Except for the OP...