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OdbcConnectionStringBuilder Constructors

Definition

Initializes a new instance of the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class.

Overloads

OdbcConnectionStringBuilder()

Initializes a new instance of the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class.

OdbcConnectionStringBuilder(String)

Initializes a new instance of the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class. The provided connection string provides the data for the instance's internal connection information.

OdbcConnectionStringBuilder()

Source:
OdbcConnectionStringbuilder.cs
Source:
OdbcConnectionStringbuilder.cs

Initializes a new instance of the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class.

public:
 OdbcConnectionStringBuilder();
public OdbcConnectionStringBuilder ();
Public Sub New ()

See also

Applies to

OdbcConnectionStringBuilder(String)

Source:
OdbcConnectionStringbuilder.cs
Source:
OdbcConnectionStringbuilder.cs

Initializes a new instance of the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class. The provided connection string provides the data for the instance's internal connection information.

public:
 OdbcConnectionStringBuilder(System::String ^ connectionString);
public OdbcConnectionStringBuilder (string? connectionString);
public OdbcConnectionStringBuilder (string connectionString);
new System.Data.Odbc.OdbcConnectionStringBuilder : string -> System.Data.Odbc.OdbcConnectionStringBuilder
Public Sub New (connectionString As String)

Parameters

connectionString
String

The basis for the object's internal connection information. Parsed into key/value pairs.

Exceptions

The connection string is incorrectly formatted (perhaps missing the required "=" within a key/value pair).

Examples

The following example creates multiple OdbcConnectionStringBuilder instances, passing a different connection string to the constructor in each case. Note that the ordering of elements within the connection string may be modified when you retrieve the ConnectionString property. Also note that keys other than the predefined "Dsn" and "Driver" keys are converted to lowercase by the OdbcConnectionStringBuilder class.

Note

This example includes a password to demonstrate how OdbcConnectionStringBuilder works with connection strings. In your applications, we recommend that you use Windows Authentication. If you must use a password, do not include a hard-coded password in your application.

using System.Data.Odbc;

class Program
{
    static void Main()
    {
        try
        {
            // Build an empty instance, just to see
            // the contents of the keys.
            DumpBuilderContents("");

            // Create a SQL Server connection string.
            DumpBuilderContents("Driver={SQL Server};Server=(local);Database=AdventureWorks;Uid=ab;Pwd=pass@word1");

            // Create an Access connection string.
            DumpBuilderContents(@"Driver={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb)};Dbq=C:\info.mdb;Exclusive=1;Uid=admin;Pwd=pass@word1");

            // Create an Oracle connection string.
            DumpBuilderContents("Driver={Microsoft ODBC for Oracle};Server=OracleServer.world;Uid=Admin;Pwd=pass@word1;");

            // Create a Sybase connection string.
            DumpBuilderContents("Driver={SYBASE ASE ODBC Driver};Srvr=SomeServer;Uid=admin;Pwd=pass@word1");

            Console.WriteLine("Press any key to finish.");
            Console.ReadLine();
        }
        catch (System.ArgumentException ex)
        {
            Console.WriteLine("Error: " + ex.Message);
        }
    }

    private static void DumpBuilderContents(string connectString)
    {
        OdbcConnectionStringBuilder builder =
            new OdbcConnectionStringBuilder(connectString);
        Console.WriteLine("=================");
        Console.WriteLine("Original connectString   = " + connectString);
        Console.WriteLine("builder.ConnectionString = " + builder.ConnectionString);
        foreach (string key in builder.Keys)
        {
            Console.WriteLine(key + "=" + builder[key].ToString());
        }
    }
}
Imports System.Data.Odbc    

Module Module1
  Sub Main()
    Try
      ' Build an empty instance, just to see
      ' the contents of the keys.
      DumpBuilderContents("")

      ' Create a SQL Server connection string.
      DumpBuilderContents("Driver={SQL Server};Server=(local);Database=AdventureWorks;Uid=ab;Pwd=pass@word1")

      ' Create an Access connection string.
      DumpBuilderContents("Driver={Microsoft Access Driver (*.mdb)};Dbq=C:\info.mdb;Exclusive=1;Uid=admin;Pwd=pass@word1")

      ' Create an Oracle connection string.
      DumpBuilderContents("Driver={Microsoft ODBC for Oracle};Server=OracleServer.world;Uid=Admin;Pwd=pass@word1;")

      ' Create a Sybase connection string.
      DumpBuilderContents("Driver={SYBASE ASE ODBC Driver};Srvr=SomeServer;Uid=admin;Pwd=pass@word1")

      Console.WriteLine("Press any key to finish.")
      Console.ReadLine()

    Catch ex As System.ArgumentException
      Console.WriteLine("Error: " & ex.Message)
    End Try
  End Sub

  Private Sub DumpBuilderContents(ByVal connectString As String)
    Dim builder As New OdbcConnectionStringBuilder(connectString)
    Console.WriteLine("=================")
    Console.WriteLine("Original connectString   = " & connectString)
    Console.WriteLine("builder.ConnectionString = " & builder.ConnectionString)
    For Each key As String In builder.Keys
      Console.WriteLine(key & "=" & builder.Item(key).ToString)
    Next
  End Sub
End Module

Remarks

You can pass a connection string in the constructor, or you can set the ConnectionString property explicitly. The behavior is the same either way.

See also

Applies to