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Using ADO Databinding in Visual C++

 

The new home for Visual Studio documentation is Visual Studio 2017 Documentation on docs.microsoft.com.

The latest version of this topic can be found at Visual Studio 2017 Documentation. Using ADO databinding in Visual C++ requires the following steps:

  • Add an ADO data control.

  • Point to a data source.

  • Specify the record source (SQL query or data retrieval language).

  • Add an ADO data-bound control.

  • Connect the data-bound control to an ADO data control.

  • Select the fields to bind to the ADO data control's record source.

To use ADO databinding in Visual C++

  1. Create an MFC dialog application or MFC Formview application using the MFC Application Wizard.

  2. Add the Microsoft ADO data control to the dialog box; see Inserting the Control into a Visual C++ Application.

  3. Point the ADO data control to your OLE DB data source.

    1. Right-click the ADO data control, and then click Properties.

    2. On the Control tab, click Use Connection String. You can use the supplied provider or you can delete it.

    3. Click Build. If you deleted the provider from Use Connection String, you are now able to define one. After you define the provider, access the properties of the ADO data control again, and then select Build again to continue.

      If a provider is defined in Use Connection String before you select Build, you are able to define the data link properties. This displays the DataLink Wizard.

    4. Change the Provider if necessary, and define Location and Data Source values, as appropriate for your provider. For example, if you are using a SQL Server provider, Location specifies the database server and Data Source specifies the database. If you are using an ODBC provider, the Data Source corresponds to the ODBC DSN.

    5. Click the Authentication tab, and then set values for User Name and Password, if required by the data source.

    6. Click the Connection tab, and then click Test Connection to test the data source. Scroll to the end of the Results window to see if the test passed. If it failed, check the configuration of your data source. Common errors include invalid passwords and incorrect values for the Location and Data Source fields.

    7. Exit the DataLink Wizard and return to the property sheet for the ADO data control.

  4. On the RecordSource tab, enter a query into Command Text (SQL). The data-bound controls can bind to the results of this query. The query is usually SQL. However, some OLE DB providers do not use SQL.

  5. Set any other ADO data control properties as needed and close the property sheet for the ADO data control.

  6. Add a data-bound control. For example, add the DataGrid control, which is different from the RDO DBGrid control.)

  7. Set the DataGrid's properties.

    1. Right-click the DataGrid, and then click Properties.

    2. Click the All tab, and then set the DataSource property to the ADO data control. Click the DataSource drop-down list and find the ID of the ADO data control. The default ID name is IDC_ADODC1.

  8. To run in test mode, press CTRL+T. You are able to scroll through the data. Press the Esc key or close the dialog box to end test mode.

If you compile and run the program, you are able to scroll through the data as well.

See Also

ADO Databinding
Databinding with ActiveX Controls in Visual C++