What's the difference between Get<T>(object id)
and Load<T>(object id)
? The documentation pretty much reads the same. Also, if it matters, in what cases should I use one over the other?
The reference provided by Brian explains it quite clearly. However, the main difference is that Load
doesn't hit the database to check and load the entity you require, since it assumes you know the entity exists. The object returned by Load
is some kind of proxy that lazily fetches the real data when required or throws an exception if the entity is not found.
Recap:
Load
should be used when you know for sure that an entity with a certain ID exists. The call does not result in a database hit (and thus can be optimized away by NHibernate in certain cases). Beware of the exception that may be raised when the object is accessed if the entity instance doesn't exist in the DB.
Get
hits the database or session cache to retrieve the entity data. If the entity exists it is returned, otherwise null
will be returned. This is the safest way to determine whether an entity with a certain ID exists or not. If you're not sure what to use, use Get
.
http://ayende.com/Blog/archive/2009/04/30/nhibernate-ndash-the-difference-between-get-load-and-querying-by.aspx
Get will return null if the object requested doesn't exist. Load will throw an exception if the object requested doesn't exist. Otherwise, they function exactly the same as far as I can tell.
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