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Introduction to ADO.Net and Visual Studio Database Tools

Introduction to ADO.Net and Visual Studio Database Tools. ISYS 512. Database Processing. Querying database Updating database: Insertion, deletion, modification. Steps to Retrieve Data. Establishes a connection to the database. Executes query commands against the database.

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Introduction to ADO.Net and Visual Studio Database Tools

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  1. Introduction to ADO.Net and Visual Studio Database Tools ISYS 512

  2. Database Processing • Querying database • Updating database: • Insertion, deletion, modification

  3. Steps to Retrieve Data • Establishes a connection to the database. • Executes query commands against the database. • SQL Select commands • Process the returned data.

  4. Steps to Update Data • Establishes a connection to the database. • Executes update commands against the database. • SQL Insert, Delete, Update commands • Receive confirmation of completion.

  5. ADO.Net: Connected and Disconnected Data Processing • The ADO.Net environment can be categorized into connected and disconnected environments. • A connected environment requires a constant connection to transfer data between the client application and the data source. • A disconnected environment retrieves data and performs modification without a constant connection to the data source.

  6. ADO.Net Classes

  7. ADO.Net Classes and Data Consumer Ado.Net Dataset Data Consumer Adapter WinForm Connection Command WebForm DataReader

  8. ADO.NET Objects • Connection Object: Represent a connection to the database. • Command Object: The command object allows us to execute a SQL statement or a stored procedure. • DataReader: It is a read-only and forward-only pointer into a table to retrieve records. • DataSet Object: A DataSet object can hold several tables and relationships between tables. • DataAdapter: This the object used to pass data between the database and the dataset.

  9. Data Providers • ODBC Provider • Open Database Connectivity • A driver manager • Used for relational databases • OLE DB Provider • OLE DB interfaces provide applications with uniform access to data stored in diverse information sources, or data stores. • MS Access (accdb) • SQL Server Provider • Oracle Provider • Etc.

  10. Using ODBC • Windows 7: • Control Panel /Administrative Tools/DataSource(ODBC) • Three types of data source names, DSN • User DSN: usable only by you and only on the machine currently using. • System DSN: Any one using the machine can use. • File DSN: Can be copied and used by other computers with the same driver installed. • Note: For 32 bit software, you have to open the ODBC panel from C:\Windows\SysWOW64\odbcad32.exe

  11. Define an ODBC DSN for Access Database • Download: SalesDB2011.accdb • Open ODBC Window • Define a System DSN to SalesDB2011 and name it: MySalesData

  12. SQL Server Express/SQL Server Express LocalDB • SQL Server Express is available free from Microsoft, but it requires more computer resources. • SQL Server Express LocalDB is a light-weight version of SQL Server Express that is already installed with VS 2012, and it does not bring heavy workload on development machines

  13. VS Database Tools • View/Server Explorer: • For connection to ODBC data sources, OleDB to MS Access, and SQL Server Express • View/SQL Server Object Explorer • For connection to SQL Server LocalDB

  14. Connect to Access Database using OLE DB • From Server Explorer, right-click Add Connection: • Microsoft Access Database File (OLE DB) • Browse for database • Test Connection • Tools/Connect to database

  15. Connect to Access Database using ODBC • From Server Explorer: • right-click Add Connection • Click Change • Microsoft Access ODBC Data source • Select DSN from the dropdown list • Test Connection

  16. To Start SQL Server Express LocalDB • View/SQL Server Object Explorer • Point to SQL Server and Right-click: • Add SQL Server • Connect to Server • Serve name: (localdb)\v11.0 • Connect

  17. Lab: Creating a LocalDB Database • Database Name: MyDept • Tables: • Department: • DID, Dname, Office • Employee • EID, Ename, Sex, Salary, HireDate, DID

  18. To Add a New Database • Open the LocalDB node • Right-click Databases • Add new database • Enter database name • Example: MyDept

  19. To Add a New Table: Department • Open the Database node: Open the MyDept node • Right-click Tables and select: Add New Table • Change the table name to Department • CREATE TABLE [dbo].[Department] • Click Update; then click Update Database

  20. To Add Records • Open the Tables node • Right-click the table name (Department) and select View Data

  21. To Modify Table Design • Point and right-click the table name: • Select: View/Designer • Change the CREATE TABLE command • Or Change the design with the designer

  22. Add Employee Table • Right-click Tables and select Add Table: • EID, Ename, Sex, Salary, HireDate, DID

  23. Working with SQL Server Express • Starting SQL Server: • Control Panel/Administrative Tools /Services/SQLServer(SQLExpress) • SQL Server database file extension: mdf • Default database folder: • A SQL Server file: testSQLServer.mdf • C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\MSSQL10.SQLEXPRESS\MSSQL\DATA\testSQLServer.mdf

  24. Creating SQL Server Database • From Server Explorer, right click data connection and choose: • Create new SQL Server Database • Server name: • LocalServerName\SQLExpress • Ex: David-PC\SQLExpress • Add new table: Right click Tables and choose Add New Table • Define table’s fields • Add rows: Right click the table name and choose Show table data.

  25. Create a New SQL Server Database: EmployeeDB • Add a new table: EmployeeTable • EID Char 10 • Ename Char 30 • Sex Char 1 • Salary Numeric (10,2) • HireDate Date • Enter data

  26. Three Ways to Create ADO.Net Objects • 1. Automatically generated when creating data bound form. • Form wizard • 2. Using Data Adapter Wizard • 3. Using code: • Example: • string strConn = "Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source=C:\\SalesDB2007.accdb"; • OleDbConnection objConn = new OleDbConnection(strConn);

  27. Data Binding • Connect a control or property to one or more data elements. • Simple binding: Use simple binding to display a field value in controls that show Data Bindings in the property window, such as text box or label. • Complex binding: Use complex binding to bind more than one field to controls such as DataGrid and list box. Use the control’s Data Source and Data Member to bind the data.

  28. Automatically Generating Data Bound Form • Creating a form with ADO.Net objects and data-bound controls to display and update information in a dataset. • Step 1: Add a new data source: • Step 2: Select controls for table fields: • Click the dropdown list next to the table’s name: • Datagrid view • Details • Step 3: Drag the table to form.

  29. Add Data Source • Data Source window: • View/Other windows/Data Source • Add New Data Source • From Dataset • Select connection • Select tables

  30. Data Bound Form Examples • Using the LocalDB database MyDept, show records of the Employee table: • with dataGridView • with detail view

  31. Items Added to the Form • Table Adapter: click smart tag • Add query • Preview data • Dataset: • Edit in dataset designer • Binding Source: It is an object that keeps track of position (the current row) of a data source. • Preview data • Code view: • Form load event: • Adapter’s Fill command

  32. Other Data Form Demos • DataGrid View • Add /Modify/Delete records. • Read only form: • Delete AddNew, Delete, Save buttons from navigator bar.

  33. Hierarchical Forms:Department/Employees • Parent table/Child table • Add parent table and child table to Data Source • Drag the parent table and the child table to the form. Parent table uses detail view and child table uses dataGrid view • Click Dataset object’s smart tag to choose Edit in Dataset Designer • With the designer, right click the parent table and choose Add/Relation • Change dataGrid’s DataSource property to the relation.

  34. Detail Form with Bound ListBox • Example: Employee table form with EID listbox and displays selected employee information in textboxes. • Choose detail view for the Employee table. • Click the dropdown list next to the EID field and click ListBox • Drag the Employee table to the form. • Bind the EID field to the BindingSource: • Activate the Property window and click the listbox • Set the DataSOurce property to BindingSource • Set the Display Member property to EID

  35. Creating A Database Application Without Programming • Creating a database application to display information and update database. • A main form with buttons to open data forms: • DisplayInfo • Enter New • Modify • Exit

  36. Demo: Add Data Source from OleDB and ODBC Data source

  37. Data Adapter Wizard – 2nd Level of Using ADO.Net • Configure Data Adapter and generating a dataset: • From the Data tab of the ToolBox, Drag OledbDataAdapter to the form. • Use the Data Adapter Wizard to configure the Adapter. • Right Click the Adapter to preview data and create dataset. • Note: If OledbDataAdapter is not listed in Toolbox’s Data tab , right click ToolBox Data Tab and select Choose Item; then select OleDbDataAdapter from .Net Framework components.

  38. Creating a Form with Bound DataGridView • Configure Adapter and generate dataset. • Bind DataGridView control to the table: • Data Source property: • DataSet • Data Member property • A table in the dataset • In the Form Load event, use Adapter’s Fill method to load the dataset: • OleDbDataAdapter1.Fill(DataSet11); • Note 1: No navigation capability • Note 2: View adapter’s properties and see the SQL commands.

  39. Creating a Form with Bound Textboxes • Configure Adapter and generate dataset. • Select textbox’s Data Bindings property: • Text: choose field from bindingSOurce object • In the Form Load event, use Adapter’s Fill method to load the dataset: • OleDbDataAdapter1.Fill(DataSet11) • Note: No navigation capability

  40. Using BindingSource Object to Do the Binding and Navigation • It is an object that keeps track of position (the current row) of a data source. • Useful properties: • DataSource • DataMember • Position property: is the index of the current row. The index is a 0-based index, the first record has a position of 0. • Methods: • MoveFirst, MoveLast, MoveNext, MovePrevious • AddNew • AllowEdit • EndEdit • Current • RemoveCurrent

  41. Bind Controls to BindingSource Object • Configure Adapter and generate dataset. • Add BindingSource object to the form • Use BindingSource object’s property window to set its DataSource and Data Member properties to the dataset object and table object. • Set control’s DataBinding property to the BindingSource object.

  42. Use BindingSource Object’s MoveNext, MovePrevious Methods • Add a MoveNext button • bindingSource1.MoveNext(); • Add a MovePrevious button: • bindingSource1.MovePrevious();

  43. Adding AddNew and Save Button AddNew button: Use BindingSource AddNew Method: private void button3_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { bindingSource1.AddNew(); } Save button: Use BindingSource EndEdit method and Adapter’s Update method: private void button4_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) { bindingSource1.EndEdit(); oleDbDataAdapter1.Update(dataSet2.CUSTOMER); }

  44. Binding ListBox • Example: Bind Customer Table’s CID field to a listbox. • Create a Adapter forCustomer table , and generate the dataset. • Add ListBox and set binding properties: • Data Source: Customer table • Display Member: Field to display in the listbox. • Value Member: the actual values for items in the list box.

  45. Display Selected Record • Bound textbox (same data source as the listbox): • If the Listbox and the textbox are bound to the same BindingSource object, the textbox will automatically displays the record of the selected listbox item. • Unbound textbox • To display the ValueMember • textBox3.Text = listBox1.SelectedValue.ToString(); • To display other fields: • VB with late binding • Textbox1.text = ListBox1.SelectedItem(“Cname”) • C# does not support late binding: No!

  46. ListBox SelectedItem Property:(Works for VB) • How to display the selected record in unbound textbox? • After binding to a data source, this property return a DataRowView object. • What is DataRowView? • Object Browser: • System.Data • DataRowView: Item property is the default property • To retrieve a column from a DataRowView object (use 0-based index to identity a column): • ListBox1.SelectedItem.Item(1) • Or: ListBox1.SelectedItem(1) • Or: ListBox1.SelectedItem(“Cname”)

  47. Using Object Browser • View/Object Browser • DataSet object model: • System.Data • DataSet • Relations • Tables • Rows • Columns • Use Object Browser to study object’s properties, methods. Ex. System.Data.OleDbDataAdapter

  48. Unbound Textbox:Navigate from Dataset to Table; from Table to Row and Field textBox3.Text = dataSet41.Tables["employee"].Rows[listBox1.SelectedIndex][1].ToString(); textBox4.Text = dataSet41.Tables["employee"].Rows[listBox1.SelectedIndex]["Salary"].ToString();

  49. Working with SQL Server Data Adapter • From the Data tab: • Choose: SQLDataAdapter • (If you don’t see it, right-click the Data tab and select Choose Item. Then select it from the .Net components)

  50. DataSet and Data Adapter • DataSet Object: A DataSet object can hold several tables and relationships between tables. • DataAdapter: This the object used to pass data between the database and the dataset. • It is an object with SQL Select, Insert, Update and Delete commands.

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