DataStoreDataExtensions.ImportString(this IDataStoreBase dataStore, string text) Method
.NET Standard 2.x
Inserts the tab-separated data from a string into the DataStore.
Namespace: DWNet.Data
Assembly: DWNet.Data.dll
Syntax
public static int ImportString(this IDataStoreBase dataStore, string text);
Parameters
text
System.String
A string from which you want to copy the data. The string should contain tab-separated columns.
Returns
System.Int32
Returns the number of rows that were imported if it succeeds.
Remarks
The string must be formatted in tab-separated. Each line must end with a carriage return and a newline character (~r~n). If the string has four tab-separated columns, one line might look like for a tab-separated string:
col1_data\t col2_data\t col3_data\t col4_data\r\n
The string should consist of rows of data. If the data includes column headings or row labels, set the startRow
and startColumn
arguments to skip them. The datatype and order of the DataStore columns must match with the columns of data in the string.
Examples
The following code example demonstrates how to import the department records from a string to a DataStore.
using DWNet.Data;
using System;
namespace Appeon.ApiDoc.DataStoreDataExtensionsExamples
{
public class ImportStringExample
{
private readonly SchoolContext _context;
public ImportStringExample(SchoolContext dataContext)
{
// Sets the data context
_context = dataContext;
}
public void Example1()
{
// Instantiates the datastore with datawindow: d_department.
var datastore = new DataStore("d_department", _context);
// Gets the string to be imported.
string importString = GetImportString();
// Imports the string to datastore.
datastore.ImportString(importString);
Console.WriteLine("Rowcount: {0}", datastore.RowCount);
for (int row = 0, rowcount = datastore.RowCount; row < rowcount; row++)
{
Console.WriteLine("DepartmentID: {0}; Name: {1}; Budget: {2}",
datastore.GetItem<int>(row, "departmentid"),
datastore.GetItem<string>(row, "name"),
datastore.GetItem<decimal>(row, "budget"));
}
/*This code produces the following output:
Rowcount: 3
DepartmentID: 1; Name: Engineering; Budget: 350000.0000
DepartmentID: 2; Name: English; Budget: 120000.0000
DepartmentID: 4; Name: Economics; Budget: 200000.0000
*/
}
}
}
Example Refer To
Model Class: D_Department
DataWindow File: d_department
Applies to
.NET Standard
2.x