ADO.NET Provider for Tally

Build 23.0.8839

Automatically Caching Data

Automatically caching data is useful when you do not want to rebuild the cache for each query. When you query data for the first time, the provider automatically initializes and builds a cache in the background. When AutoCache = true, the provider uses the cache for subsequent query executions, resulting in faster response times.

Configuring Automatic Caching

Caching the Company Table

The following example caches the Company table in the file specified by the CacheLocation property of the connection string.

C#

String connectionString = "Cache Location=C:\\cache.db;AutoCache=true;Url='http://localhost:9000'";
using (TallyConnection connection = new TallyConnection(connectionString)) {
  TallyCommand cmd = new TallyCommand("SELECT Name, Address FROM Company WHERE CompanyNumber = '1000'", connection);
  TallyDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader();
  while (rdr.Read()) {
    Console.WriteLine("Read and cached the row with Id " + rdr["Id"]);
  }
}

VB.NET

Dim connectionString As [String] = "Cache Location=C:\\cache.db;AutoCache=true;Url='http://localhost:9000'"
Using connection As New TallyConnection(connectionString)
  Dim cmd As New TallyCommand("SELECT Name, Address FROM Company WHERE CompanyNumber = '1000'", connection)
  Dim rdr As TallyDataReader = cmd.ExecuteReader()
  While rdr.Read()
	  Console.WriteLine("Read and cached the row with Id " + rdr("Id"))
  End While
End Using

Common Use Case

A common use for automatically caching data is to improve driver performance when making repeated requests to a live data source, such as building a report or creating a visualization. With auto caching enabled, repeated requests to the same data may be executed in a short period of time, but within an allowable tolerance (CacheTolerance) of what is considered "live" data.

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Build 23.0.8839