ObjectContext.ObjectStateManager Property

Definition

Gets the object state manager used by the object context to track object changes.

public:
 property System::Data::Objects::ObjectStateManager ^ ObjectStateManager { System::Data::Objects::ObjectStateManager ^ get(); };
public System.Data.Objects.ObjectStateManager ObjectStateManager { get; }
member this.ObjectStateManager : System.Data.Objects.ObjectStateManager
Public ReadOnly Property ObjectStateManager As ObjectStateManager

Property Value

The ObjectStateManager used by this ObjectContext.

Examples

This example gets the ObjectStateManager from the ObjectContext and uses the state manager to access an object in the context.

int orderId = 43680;

using (AdventureWorksEntities context =
    new AdventureWorksEntities())
{
    ObjectStateManager objectStateManager = context.ObjectStateManager;
    ObjectStateEntry stateEntry = null;

    var order = (from o in context.SalesOrderHeaders
                 where o.SalesOrderID == orderId
                 select o).First();

    // Attempts to retrieve ObjectStateEntry for the given EntityKey.
    bool isPresent = objectStateManager.TryGetObjectStateEntry(((IEntityWithKey)order).EntityKey, out stateEntry);
    if (isPresent)
    {
        Console.WriteLine("The entity was found");
    }
}

This example uses the TryGetObjectStateEntry method on the returned ObjectStateManager to get an object based on its entity key.

private static void ApplyItemUpdates(SalesOrderDetail originalItem,
    SalesOrderDetail updatedItem)
{
    using (AdventureWorksEntities context =
        new AdventureWorksEntities())
    {
        context.SalesOrderDetails.Attach(updatedItem);
        // Check if the ID is 0, if it is the item is new.
        // In this case we need to chage the state to Added.
        if (updatedItem.SalesOrderDetailID == 0)
        {
            // Because the ID is generated by the database we do not need to
            // set updatedItem.SalesOrderDetailID.
            context.ObjectStateManager.ChangeObjectState(updatedItem, System.Data.EntityState.Added);
        }
        else
        {
            // If the SalesOrderDetailID is not 0, then the item is not new
            // and needs to be updated. Because we already added the
            // updated object to the context we need to apply the original values.
            // If we attached originalItem to the context
            // we would need to apply the current values:
            // context.ApplyCurrentValues("SalesOrderDetails", updatedItem);
            // Applying current or original values, changes the state
            // of the attached object to Modified.
            context.ApplyOriginalValues("SalesOrderDetails", originalItem);
        }
        context.SaveChanges();
    }
}

Applies to

See also