LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs Class
Definition
Important
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Provides data for the Deleting event.
public ref class LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs : System::ComponentModel::CancelEventArgs
public class LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs : System.ComponentModel.CancelEventArgs
type LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs = class
inherit CancelEventArgs
Public Class LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs
Inherits CancelEventArgs
- Inheritance
Examples
The following example shows how to cancel the delete operation based on a property in the OriginalObject property and a value from the Web page. In the example, users must select a CheckBox control to confirm that they want to delete a product record when its OnSale
property is set to true
.
protected void LinqDataSource_Deleting(object sender, LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs e)
{
Product product = (Product)e.OriginalObject;
if (product.OnSale && !confirmCheckBox.Checked)
{
e.Cancel = true;
}
}
Protected Sub LinqDataSource_Deleting(ByVal sender As Object, ByVal e As System.Web.UI.WebControls.LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs)
Dim product As Product
product = CType(e.OriginalObject, Product)
If (product.OnSale And Not confirmCheckBox.Checked) Then
e.Cancel = True
End If
End Sub
Remarks
The LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs object is passed to any handler for the Deleting event. The OriginalObject property contains the data that will be deleted.
If the object that represents the data source throws a validation exception before it deletes the data, the Exception property contains an instance of the LinqDataSourceValidationException class. You can retrieve all the validation exceptions through the InnerExceptions property. If no validation exception is thrown, the Exception property contains null
. If you handle the validation exceptions and do not want the exception to be re-thrown, set the ExceptionHandled property to true
.
You create an event handler for the Deleting event to validate the data, to examine validation errors from the data class, or to cancel the delete operation. You cancel the delete operation by setting the Cancel property to true
.
By default, the LinqDataSource control stores the original values from the data source in view state in the Web page, except those whose ColumnAttribute attribute is marked as UpdateCheck.Never
. LINQ to SQL automatically checks the integrity of the data before deleting the data. It does this by comparing the current values in the data source with the original values that are stored in view state. You can perform additional data validation by creating a handler for the Deleting event.
Constructors
LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs(LinqDataSourceValidationException) |
Initializes a new instance of the LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs class with the specified exception. |
LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs(Object) |
Initializes a new instance of the LinqDataSourceDeleteEventArgs class. |
Properties
Cancel |
Gets or sets a value indicating whether the event should be canceled. (Inherited from CancelEventArgs) |
Exception |
Gets the exception that was thrown while the data was being validated before the delete operation. |
ExceptionHandled |
Gets or sets a value that indicates whether the exception was handled and that it should not be thrown again. |
OriginalObject |
Gets the object that represents the data to delete. |
Methods
Equals(Object) |
Determines whether the specified object is equal to the current object. (Inherited from Object) |
GetHashCode() |
Serves as the default hash function. (Inherited from Object) |
GetType() |
Gets the Type of the current instance. (Inherited from Object) |
MemberwiseClone() |
Creates a shallow copy of the current Object. (Inherited from Object) |
ToString() |
Returns a string that represents the current object. (Inherited from Object) |