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Traversing a Simple Rowset

 

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The latest version of this topic can be found at Traversing a Simple Rowset.

The following example shows a quick and easy database access that does not involve commands. The following consumer code, in an ATL project, retrieves records from a table called Artists in a Microsoft Access database using the Microsoft OLE DB Provider for ODBC. The code creates a CTable table object with an accessor based on the user record class CArtists. It opens a connection, opens a session on the connection, and opens the table on the session.

#include <atldbcli.h>  
  
CDataSource connection;  
CSession session;  
CTable<CAccessor<CArtists> > artists;  
  
// Open the connection, session, and table, specifying authentication   
// using Windows NT integrated security. Hard-coding a password is a major  
// security weakness.  
connection.Open(CLSID_MSDASQL, "NWind", NULL, NULL,   
DBPROP_AUTH_INTEGRATED);  
session.Open(connection);  
artists.Open(session, "Artists");  
  
// Get data from the rowset  
while (artists.MoveNext() == S_OK)  
{  
   cout << artists.m_szFirstName;  
   cout << artists.m_szLastName;  
}  

The user record, CArtists, looks like this:

class CArtists  
{  
public:  
// Data Elements  
   CHAR m_szFirstName[20];  
   CHAR m_szLastName[30];  
   short m_nAge;  
  
// Column binding map  
BEGIN_COLUMN_MAP(CArtists)  
   COLUMN_ENTRY(1, m_szFirstName)  
   COLUMN_ENTRY(2, m_szLastName)  
   COLUMN_ENTRY(3, m_nAge)  
END_COLUMN_MAP()  

See Also

Working with OLE DB Consumer Templates