aspnetcore/tutorials/first-mvc-app/new-field/includes/new-field9.md
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In this section Entity Framework Migrations is used to:
When Entity Framework (EF) is used to automatically create a database from model classes:
Add a Rating property to Models/Movie.cs:
Build the app
Press <kbd>Ctrl</kbd>+<kbd>Shift</kbd>+<kbd>B</kbd>
From the View menu, select Terminal and enter the following command:
dotnet build
Because you've added a new field to the Movie class, you need to update the property binding list so this new property will be included. In MoviesController.cs, update the [Bind] attribute for both the Create and Edit action methods to include the Rating property:
[Bind("Id,Title,ReleaseDate,Genre,Price,Rating")]
Update the view templates in order to display, create, and edit the new Rating property in the browser view.
Edit the /Views/Movies/Index.cshtml file and add a Rating field:
Update the /Views/Movies/Create.cshtml with a Rating field.
You can copy/paste the previous "form group" and let IntelliSense help you update the fields. IntelliSense works with Tag Helpers.
You can copy/paste the previous "form group" and let IntelliSense help you update the fields. IntelliSense works with Tag Helpers. The C# Dev Kit extension provides IntelliSense support in Visual Studio Code.
Add the Rating property to the remaining Create.cshtml, Delete.cshtml, Details.cshtml, and Edit.cshtml view templates.
Update the SeedData class so that it provides a value for the new column. A sample change is shown below, but you'll want to make this change for each new Movie.
The app won't work until the DB is updated to include the new field. If it's run now, the following SqlException is thrown:
SqlException: Invalid column name 'Rating'.
This error occurs because the updated Movie model class is different than the schema of the Movie table of the existing database. (There's no Rating column in the database table.)
There are a few approaches to resolving the error:
Have the Entity Framework automatically drop and re-create the database based on the new model class schema. This approach is very convenient early in the development cycle when you're doing active development on a test database; it allows you to quickly evolve the model and database schema together. The downside, though, is that you lose existing data in the database — so you don't want to use this approach on a production database! Using an initializer to automatically seed a database with test data is often a productive way to develop an application. This is a good approach for early development and when using SQLite.
Explicitly modify the schema of the existing database so that it matches the model classes. The advantage of this approach is that you keep your data. You can make this change either manually or by creating a database change script.
Use Entity Framework Migrations to update the database schema.
For this tutorial, Entity Framework Migrations is used.
From the Tools menu, select NuGet Package Manager > Package Manager Console.
In the Package Manager Console, enter the following command:
Add-Migration Rating
The Add-Migration command tells the migration framework to examine the current Movie model with the current Movie DB schema and create the necessary code to migrate the DB to the new model.
The name "Rating" is arbitrary and is used to name the migration file. It's helpful to use a meaningful name for the migration file.
If all the records in the DB are deleted, the initialize method will seed the DB and include the Rating field.
In the Package Manager Console, enter the following command:
Update-Database
The Update-Database command runs the Up method in migrations that have not been applied.
Delete the Migrations folder and the database file, and then run the following .NET CLI commands:
dotnet ef migrations add InitialCreate
dotnet ef database update
For more information, see Resetting all migrations.
Run the app and verify you can create, edit, and display movies with a Rating field.
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