This article has been excerpted from the book "A Programmer's Guide to ADO.NET in C#".
The data adapter has a FillError event that occurs during a fill method. It allows a user to determine whether a fill operation should continue. For example, FillError could occur when you can't convert data from a database to Common Language Runtime (CLR) type without losing precision or when data type casting is not valid.
FillErrorEventHandler handles the FillError event. The event handler receives an argument of type FillErrorEventArgs, which contains data related to this event. The FillErrorEventHandler is as follows:
public delegate void FillErrorEventHandler(object sender, FillErrorEventArgs e );
Where the sender is the source of the event and e is FillErrorEventArgs, which contains the event data. Table 9-3 defines the FillErrorEventArgs properties.
Table 9-3. The FillErrorEventArgs members
Property
|
Description
|
Continue
|
Represent a value
indicating whether to continue the fill operator
|
DataTable
|
Return the data table
being updated when the error occurred
|
Errors
|
Returns the errors
|
Values
|
Returns the rows
being updated when an error occurred
|
RowUpdated and RowUpdating are two more events that a data adapter supports. The RowUpdating event occurs when an Update method is called before a command executed against the data source. The RowUpdated event occurs when a command executed.
The RowUpdated event handler receives an argument of type OleDbRowUpdatedEventArgs that contains data related to this event. Table 9-4 describes the OleDbRowUpdateEventArgs members.
Table 9-4. The OleDbRowUpdatedEventArgs Members
Property
|
Description
|
Command
|
Returns the command
object executed when
Update
is called
|
Errors
|
Returns errors
generated during the update operation
|
RecrodsAffected
|
Returns the number of
rows affected during insert, update and delete operations
|
Row
|
Returns the data row
sent through an
Update
|
StatementType
|
Returns the SQL
statement type
|
Status
|
Returns the
UpdateStatus of a command
|
TableMapping
|
Returns the
DataTableMapping
sent through an
Update
|
Similar to RowUpdated, the RowUpdating event handler receives an argument of type OleDbRowupdatingEventArgs that defines the same properties as OleDbRowUpdated with the same meaning.
Ok, now it's time to write an application to test the data adapter events. I created a Windows application and added a button control to the form. After that, I changed the button's name property to DataAdapterEventsTestBtn and wrote a button-click event handler by double-clicking on the button control.
Next, I added a data adapter control to the form by dragging the OleBbdAtaadapter component from the toolbox's data tab to the form. As you drop the OleDbDataAdapter component to the form, the data adapter configuration wizard pops up. In this application, I added the Customers table to the Query
Builder and selected the CompanyName, ContactName, and CustomerID columns from the Customers table. As you can see from figure 9-8, the Query Builder shows the SQL statement.
Figure 9-8. The query builder with the SELECT statement from the Customers table
Next, I used the Properties > Event (the lightning bolt) button of the data adapter to add the event handlers. I added all three FillError, RowUpdating, and RowUpdated event handlers, as shown in Figure 9-9.
Figure 9-9 AddingDataAdapter events from the Properties window
Now you can write code on the FillError event handler. You call the FillError event handler when the Fill method of the data adapter fails. Listing 9-3 shows the code for the FillError event handler. As you can see from Listing 9-3, I used DataFillErrorEventArgs's members to get information about the error.
Listing 9-3. DataAdapter FillError event handler code
-
- private void oleDbDataAdapter1_FillError(object sender, System.Data.FillErrorEventArgs e) {
- if (e.Errors.GetType() == typeof(System.OverflowException)) {
- MessageBox.Show("Error in Fill operation for table" +
- e.DataTable.TableName +
- ", Error Message: " + e.Errors.Message.ToString() +
- ", Source: " + e.Errors.Source.ToString());
- e.Continue = true;
- }
- }
Listing 9-4 and 9-5 show the code for the RowUpdated and RowUpdating event handlers. You call the RowUpdated event handler when a row is updated using the Update method of a data adapter, and you call RowUpdating when a row is updating.
Listing 9-4. The RowUpdated event handler
-
- private void oleDbDataAdapter1_RowUpdated(object sender, System.Data.OleDb.OleDbRowUpdatedEventArgs e) {
- if (e.Status == UpdateStatus.ErrorsOccurred) {
- MessageBox.Show("Error Message: " + e.Errors.Message.ToString() +
- ", Source: " + e.Errors.Source.ToString());
- e.Row.RowError = e.Errors.Message;
- e.Status = UpdateStatus.SkipCurrentRow;
- } else {
- MessageBox.Show("Updated");
- }
- }
As you can see from Listing 9-5, you can compare the StatementType member of OleDbRowUpdatingEventArgs to the StatementType enumeration to find out the statement type. The StatementType enumeration defines Select, Insert, Update, and Delete members.
Listing 9-5, The RowUpdating event handler
- private void oleDbDataAdapter1_RowUpdating(object sender, System.Data.OleDb.OleDbRowUpdatingEventArgs e) {
-
- if (e.StatementType == StatementType.Insert) {
- MessageBox.Show("Inserting");
- }
-
- else if (e.StatementType == StatementType.Update) {
- MessageBox.Show("Updating");
- }
-
- else if (e.StatementType == StatementType.Delete) {
- MessageBox.Show("Deleting");
- }
-
- else if (e.StatementType == StatementType.Select) {
- MessageBox.Show("Selecting");
- }
- }
Now, to test these events you can write code that fills a dataset and calls the update method of the data adapter. I added an event handler for the button by double-clicking on it and writing the code shown in listing 9-6. As you can see, I created a new OleDbDataAdapter object and copied oleDbDataAdapter1 to it (the framework added oleDbDataAdapter1).
Listing 9-6.Calling DataAdapter's Fill and update methods
Note: Don't forget to add a reference to the System.Data.OleDb namespace.
You can also use the SelectCommand, UpdateCommand, and DeleteCommand objects to select, update, and delete the date from the table.
Now, if you run the application, you'll see an insert message; if you click the button more than once, you'll get the error shown in Figure 9-10.
Figure 9-10. The error message generated by the RowUpdated event handler when trying to add duplicate employee records
Hope this article would have helped you in understanding working with DataAadapter Events in ADO.NET. See other articles on the website also for further reference.
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