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Home/ Questions/Q 116327
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T03:09:38+00:00 2026-05-11T03:09:38+00:00

I think I should mention I’m trying to get Entity Framework\SQL server to do

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I think I should mention I’m trying to get Entity Framework\SQL server to do something that I was used to coming from Rails. I really just want to know the ‘best’ way to have automatic created_at & updated_at column values for records that I insert/update in the database.

Right now I’ve hooked into the ObjectContext.SavingChanges event and things are working well. After I wrote and tested my code however I realize that there may be a better or faster way to do this.

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  1. 2026-05-11T03:09:38+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 3:09 am

    One method is to use insert/update triggers to set the created_at and updated_at columns to the current time.

    The Insert trigger would look something like this:

    CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[inserted_myTable] ON [dbo].[myTable] AFTER INSERT AS  BEGIN     SET NOCOUNT ON;     UPDATE [dbo].[myTable] Set AdmitDateTime = GetDate() where pkid in (SELECT pkid FROM Inserted) END 

    The Update trigger would look something like this:

    CREATE TRIGGER [dbo].[updated_myTable] ON  [dbo].[myTable] AFTER UPDATE AS  BEGIN     SET NOCOUNT ON;     UPDATE [dbo].[myTable] Set AdmitDateTime = GetDate() where pkid in (SELECT pkid FROM Inserted) END 

    One advantage of the trigger approach is that the time/date will always be in the same time zone. Another advantage is that if someone modifies the database record outside of your application, the fields are still updated.

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