Map ListObject columns to data
When you bind a ListObject control to a DataTable, you might not want to display all the columns in a list, or you might have certain columns that are not bound to data. You can map which columns you want to appear in the ListObject when you call the SetDataBinding method.
Applies to: The information in this topic applies to document-level projects and VSTO Add-in projects for Excel. For more information, see Features available by Office application and project type.
Map columns
To map a data table to columns in a list
Create the DataTable at the class level.
Add sample columns and data in the
Startup
event handler of theSheet1
class (in a document-level project) orThisAddIn
class (in a VSTO Add-in project).table.Columns.Add("Id", typeof(int)); table.Columns.Add("FirstName", typeof(string)); table.Columns.Add("LastName", typeof(string)); table.Columns.Add("Title", typeof(string)); table.Rows.Add(1, "Nancy", "Anderson", "Sales Representative"); table.Rows.Add(2, "Robert", "Brown", "Sales Representative");
Call the SetDataBinding method and pass in the column names in the order they should appear. The list object will be bound to the newly created DataTable, but the order of the columns in the list object will differ from the order they appear in the DataTable.
Specify unmapped columns
When you map columns to a DataTable, you can also specify that certain columns should not be bound to data by passing in an empty string. A new column that is not bound to data is then added to the ListObject control.
To specify an unmapped column when mapping ListObject columns
Call the SetDataBinding method and pass in the column names in the order they should appear. Use an empty string to indicate where an unmapped column is added; in this case, between the title column and the last name column.
Compile the code
This code example assumes you have an existing ListObject named list1
on the worksheet in which this code appears.