DataView RowFilter Syntax [C#]
This example describes syntax of dataview rowfilter.it describe how to use dataview rowfilter in c#.
dataview rowfilter in c# example
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Note: String comparison is culture-sensitive, it uses CultureInfo from DataTable.Locale property of related table (
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The reference to the child column must be in an aggregate function because child relationships may return multiple rows. For example expression
If a table has more than one child relation, the prefix must contain relation name. For example expression
This example shows aggregate function performed on a single table.
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Column names
If a column name contains any of these special characters~
(
)
#
\
/
=
>
<
+
-
*
%
&
|
^
'
"
[
]
, you must enclose the column name within square brackets [
]
. If a column name contains right bracket ]
or backslash \
, escape it with backslash (\]
or \\
).dataview rowfilter in c# example
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// no special character in column name "id" dataView.RowFilter = "id = 10"; // no special character in column name "$id" dataView.RowFilter = "$id = 10"; // special character "#" in column name "#id" dataView.RowFilter = "[#id] = 10"; //special characters in column name "[id]" dataView.RowFilter = "[[id\]] = 10";
Literals
String values are enclosed within single quotes'
'
. If the string contains single quote '
, the quote must be doubled.[C#]
Number values are not enclosed within any characters. The values should be the same as is the result of//string value dataView.RowFilter = "Name = 'John'" //string with single quotes "John 'A'" dataView.RowFilter = "Name = 'John ''A'''" dataView.RowFilter = String.Format("Name = '{0}'", "John 'A'".Replace("'", "''"));
int.ToString()
or float.ToString()
method for invariant or English culture.[C#]
Date values are enclosed within sharp characters// integer value dataView.RowFilter = "Year = 2008" // float value dataView.RowFilter = "Price = 1199.9" dataView.RowFilter = String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.NumberFormat,"Price = {0}", 1199.9f);
#
#
. The date format is the same as is the result of DateTime.ToString()
method for invariant or English culture.[C#]
Alternatively you can enclose all values within single quotesdataView.RowFilter = "Date = #12/31/2008#" // date value (time is 00:00:00) dataView.RowFilter = "Date = #2008-12-31#" // also this format is supported dataView.RowFilter = "Date = #12/31/2008 16:44:58#" // date and time value dataView.RowFilter = String.Format(CultureInfo.InvariantCulture.DateTimeFormat, "Date = #{0}#", new DateTime(2008, 12, 31, 16, 44, 58));
'
'
. It means you can use string values
for numbers or date time values. In this case the current
culture is used to convert the string to the specific value.[C#]
dataView.RowFilter = "Date = '12/31/2008 16:44:58'" // if current culture is English dataView.RowFilter = "Date = '31.12.2008 16:44:58'" // if current culture is German dataView.RowFilter = "Price = '1199.90'" // if current culture is English dataView.RowFilter = "Price = '1199,90'" // if current culture is German
Comparison operators
Equal, not equal, less, greater operators are used to include only values that suit to a comparison expression. You can use these operators=
<>
<
<=
>
>=
.Note: String comparison is culture-sensitive, it uses CultureInfo from DataTable.Locale property of related table (
dataView.Table.Locale
).
If the property is not explicitly set, its default value is
DataSet.Locale (and its default value is current system culture
Thread.CurrentThread.CurrentCulture).[C#]
Operator IN is used to include only values from the list. You can use the operator for all data types, such as numbers or strings.dataView.RowFilter = "Num = 10" // number is equal to 10 dataView.RowFilter = "Date < #1/1/2008#" // date is less than 1/1/2008 dataView.RowFilter = "Name <> 'John'" // string is not equal to 'John' dataView.RowFilter = "Name >= 'Jo'" // string comparison
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Operator LIKE is used to include only values that match a pattern with wildcards. Wildcard character isdataView.RowFilter = "Id IN (1, 2, 3)" // integer values dataView.RowFilter = "Price IN (1.0, 9.9, 11.5)" // float values dataView.RowFilter = "Name IN ('John', 'Jim', 'Tom')" // string values dataView.RowFilter = "Date IN (#12/31/2008#, #1/1/2009#)" // date time values dataView.RowFilter = "Id NOT IN (1, 2, 3)" // values not from the list
*
or %
, it can be at the beginning of a pattern '*value'
, at the end 'value*'
, or at both '*value*'
. Wildcard in the middle of a patern 'va*lue'
is not allowed.[C#]
If a pattern in a LIKE clause contains any of these special charactersdataView.RowFilter = "Name LIKE 'j*'" // values that start with 'j' dataView.RowFilter = "Name LIKE '%jo%'" // values that contain 'jo' dataView.RowFilter = "Name NOT LIKE 'j*'" // values that don't start with 'j'
*
%
[
]
, those characters must be escaped in brackets [
]
like this [*]
, [%]
, [[]
or []]
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The following method escapes a text value for usage in a LIKE clause.dataView.RowFilter = "Name LIKE '[*]*'" // values that starts with '*' dataView.RowFilter = "Name LIKE '[[]*'" // values that starts with '['
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public static string EscapeLikeValue(string valueWithoutWildcards)
{
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
for (int i = 0; i < valueWithoutWildcards.Length; i++)
{
char c = valueWithoutWildcards[i];
if (c == '*' || c == '%' || c == '[' || c == ']')
sb.Append("[").Append(c).Append("]");
else if (c == '\'')
sb.Append("''");
else
sb.Append(c);
}
return sb.ToString();
}
[C#]// select all that starts with the value string (in this case with "*")
string value = "*";
//the dataView.RowFilter will be: "Name LIKE '[*]*'"
dataView.RowFilter = String.Format("Name LIKE '{0}*'", EscapeLikeValue(value));
Boolean operators
Boolean operatorsAND
, OR
and NOT
are used to concatenate expressions. Operator NOT has
precedence over AND operator and it has precedence over OR
operator.[C#]
// operator AND has precedence over OR operator, parenthesis are needed
dataView.RowFilter = "City = 'Tokyo' AND (Age < 20 OR Age > 60)";
// following examples do the same
dataView.RowFilter = "City <> 'Tokyo' AND City <> 'Paris'";
dataView.RowFilter = "NOT City = 'Tokyo' AND NOT City = 'Paris'";
dataView.RowFilter = "NOT (City = 'Tokyo' OR City = 'Paris')";
dataView.RowFilter = "City NOT IN ('Tokyo', 'Paris')";
Arithmetic and string operators
Arithmetic operators are addition+
, subtraction -
, multiplication *
, division /
and modulus %
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dataView.RowFilter = "MotherAge - Age < 20"; // people with young mother dataView.RowFilter = "Age % 10 = 0"; // people with decennial birthdayThere is also one string operator concatenation+
.
Parent-Child Relation Referencing
A parent table can be referenced in an expression using parent column name withParent.
prefix. A column in a child table can be referenced using child column name with Child.
prefix.The reference to the child column must be in an aggregate function because child relationships may return multiple rows. For example expression
SUM(Child.Price)
returns sum of all prices in child table related to the row in parent table.If a table has more than one child relation, the prefix must contain relation name. For example expression
Child(OrdersToItemsRelation).Price
references to column Price in child table using relation named OrdersToItemsRelation.Aggregate Functions
There are supported following aggregate functionsSUM
, COUNT
, MIN
, MAX
, AVG
(average), STDEV
(statistical standard deviation) and VAR
(statistical variance).This example shows aggregate function performed on a single table.
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[C#]// select people with above-average salary dataView.RowFilter = "Salary > AVG(Salary)";Following example shows aggregate functions performed on two tables which have parent-child relation. Suppose there are tables Orders and Items with the parent-child relation.
// select orders which have more than 5 items
dataView.RowFilter = "COUNT(Child.IdOrder) > 5";
// select orders which total price (sum of items prices) is greater or equal $500
dataView.RowFilter = "SUM(Child.Price) >= 500";
Functions
There are also supported following functions. Detailed description can be found here DataColumn.Expression.CONVERT
– converts particular expression to a specified .NET Framework typeLEN
– gets the length of a stringISNULL
– checks an expression and either returns the checked expression or a replacement valueIIF
– gets one of two values depending on the result of a logical expressionTRIM
– removes all leading and trailing blank characters like \r, \n, \t, ‚ 'SUBSTRING
– gets a sub-string of a specified length, starting at a specified point in the string
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