KISS: Simple C# application which communicates with a RESTful web service.
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Published on 2009-09-18T09:21:31Z
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2010/04/25
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Following the KISS principle, I suddenly realised the following:
- In .NET, you can use the Entity Model Framework to wrap around a database.
- This model can be exposed as a web service through WCF.
- This web service would have a very standardized definition.
- A client application could be created which could consume any such RESTful web service.
I don't want to re-invent the wheel and it wouldn't surprise me if someone has already done this, so my question is simple: Has anyone already created a simple (desktop, not web) client application that can consume a RESTful service that's based on the Entity Framework and which will allow the user to read and write data directly to this service?
Otherwise, I'll just have to "invent" this myself. :-)
Problem is, the database layer and RESTful service is already finished. The RESTful service will only stay in the project during it's development phase, since we can use the database-layer assembly directly from the web applications that are build around it. When the web application is deployed, the RESTful services are just kept out of the deployment.
But the database has a lot of data to manage over nearly 50 tables. When developing against a local database, we can have straight access to the database so I wouldn't need this tool for this. When it's deployed, the web application would be the only way to access the data so I could not use this tool. But we're also having a test phase where the database is stored on another system outside the local domain and this database is not available for developers. Only administrators have direct access to this database, making tests a bit more complex.
However, through the RESTful service, I can still access the data directly. Thus, when some test goes wrong, I can repair the data through this connection or just create a copy of the data for tests on my local system. There's plenty of other functionality and it's even possible to just open the URL to a table service straight in Excel or XMLSpy to see the contents. But when I want to write something back, I have to write special code to do just that. A generic tool that would allow me to access the data and modify it would be easier. Since it's a generic setup around the ADO.NET Data services, this should be reasonable easy too.
Thus, I can do it but hoped someone else has already done something similar. But it appears that there's no such tool made yet...
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