LinqDataSource.Update(IDictionary, IDictionary, IDictionary) Method
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Performs an update operation.
public:
int Update(System::Collections::IDictionary ^ keys, System::Collections::IDictionary ^ values, System::Collections::IDictionary ^ oldValues);
public int Update (System.Collections.IDictionary keys, System.Collections.IDictionary values, System.Collections.IDictionary oldValues);
member this.Update : System.Collections.IDictionary * System.Collections.IDictionary * System.Collections.IDictionary -> int
Public Function Update (keys As IDictionary, values As IDictionary, oldValues As IDictionary) As Integer
- keys
- IDictionary
The row key values for the records to be updated.
- values
- IDictionary
The row values to be updated in the data source.
- oldValues
- IDictionary
The row values that are evaluated to detect data conflicts.
The number of records affected by the update operation.
The following example shows how to programmatically update a record in the data source after the user clicks a button. The code passes a ListDictionary object that contains the key value, a ListDictionary object that contains the original values, and a ListDictionary object that contains the new values to the Update method.
protected void Reset_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
ListDictionary keyValues = new ListDictionary();
ListDictionary newValues = new ListDictionary();
ListDictionary oldValues = new ListDictionary();
keyValues.Add("ProductID", int.Parse(((Label)DetailsView1.FindControl("IDLabel")).Text));
oldValues.Add("ProductName", ((Label)DetailsView1.FindControl("NameLabel")).Text);
oldValues.Add("ProductCategory", ((Label)DetailsView1.FindControl("CategoryLabel")).Text);
oldValues.Add("Color", ((Label)DetailsView1.FindControl("ColorLabel")).Text);
newValues.Add("ProductName", "New Product");
newValues.Add("ProductCategory", "General");
newValues.Add("Color", "Not assigned");
LinqDataSource1.Update(keyValues, newValues, oldValues);
DetailsView1.DataBind();
}
Protected Sub Add_Click(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.EventArgs)
Dim keyValues As New ListDictionary()
Dim newValues As New ListDictionary()
Dim oldValues As New ListDictionary()
keyValues.Add("ProductID", Int32.Parse(CType(DetailsView1.FindControl("IDLabel"), Label).Text))
oldValues.Add("ProductName", CType(DetailsView1.FindControl("NameLabel"), Label).Text)
oldValues.Add("ProductCategory", CType(DetailsView1.FindControl("CategoryLabel"), Label).Text)
oldValues.Add("Color", CType(DetailsView1.FindControl("ColorLabel"), Label).Text)
newValues.Add("ProductName", "New Product")
newValues.Add("ProductCategory", "General")
newValues.Add("Color", "Not assigned")
LinqDataSource1.Update(keyValues, newValues, oldValues)
DetailsView1.DataBind()
End Sub
The following example shows the markup for the previous example.
<asp:LinqDataSource
ContextTypeName="ExampleDataContext"
TableName="Products"
EnableUpdate="true"
ID="LinqDataSource1"
runat="server">
</asp:LinqDataSource>
<asp:DetailsView
DataSourceID="LinqDataSource1"
AllowPaging="True"
ID="DetailsView1"
runat="server"
AutoGenerateRows="False">
<Fields>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Product ID">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="IDLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductID") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Product Name">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="NameLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductName") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Category">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="CategoryLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductCategory") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Color">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="ColorLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("Color") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
</Fields>
</asp:DetailsView>
<asp:button
ID="Button1"
Text="Reset with default values"
runat="server"
onclick="Reset_Click" />
<asp:LinqDataSource
ContextTypeName="ExampleDataContext"
TableName="Products"
EnableUpdate="true"
ID="LinqDataSource1"
runat="server">
</asp:LinqDataSource>
<asp:DetailsView
DataSourceID="LinqDataSource1"
AllowPaging="True"
ID="DetailsView1"
runat="server" AutoGenerateRows="False">
<Fields>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Product ID">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="IDLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductID") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Product Name">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="NameLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductName") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Category">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="CategoryLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("ProductCategory") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
<asp:templatefield HeaderText="Color">
<itemtemplate>
<asp:Label ID="ColorLabel" runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("Color") %>'></asp:Label>
</itemtemplate>
</asp:templatefield>
</Fields>
</asp:DetailsView>
<asp:button
ID="Button1"
Text="Reset with default values"
runat="server"
onclick="Add_Click" />
Typically, you do not have to call the Update method from your code. The data-bound control will automatically call the Update method when the user takes action to update a record. You explicitly call the Update method when you want to create your own process for updating data.
Product | Versions |
---|---|
.NET Framework | 3.5, 4.0, 4.5, 4.5.1, 4.5.2, 4.6, 4.6.1, 4.6.2, 4.7, 4.7.1, 4.7.2, 4.8, 4.8.1 |
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