Propriété Item
Espace de noms : Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime
Assembly : Microsoft.SqlServer.ManagedDTS (en Microsoft.SqlServer.ManagedDTS.dll)
Syntaxe
'Déclaration
Public ReadOnly Default Property Item ( _
index As Object _
) As Variable
Get
'Utilisation
Dim instance As Variables
Dim index As Object
Dim value As Variable
value = instance(index)
public Variable this[
Object index
] { get; }
public:
property Variable^ default[Object^ index] {
Variable^ get (Object^ index);
}
member Item : Variable
JScript prend en charge l'utilisation de propriétés indexées, mais pas la déclaration de nouvelles propriétés.
Paramètres
- index
Type : System. . :: . .Object
The name, ID, description, or index of the Variable object to return.
Valeur de propriété
Type : Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime. . :: . .Variable
A Variable object.
Notes
If the call to the Contains method returns true, you can access the specified element in the collection by using the syntax Variables[index]. If the Contains method returns false, this property throws an exception. In C#, this property is the indexer for the Variables class.
Exemples
The following code example adds a variable to the package. The code example uses various methods to locate the variable and print its name, value, and namespace.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Text;
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime;
namespace Adding_Variables
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
Application app = new Application();
// Load a sample package that contains a variable that sets the file name.
Package pkg = app.LoadPackage(@"C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Samples\Integration Services\Package Samples\CalculatedColumns Sample\CalculatedColumns\CalculatedColumns.dtsx", null);
Variables pkgVars = pkg.Variables;
Variable myVar = pkg.Variables.Add("myCustomVar", false, "User", "3");
// Verify whether the variable is in the collection now.
Boolean hasMyVar = pkg.Variables.Contains("myCustomVar");
Console.WriteLine("The variable was found? {0}", hasMyVar);
// Loop over the collection using the foreach keyword.
foreach (Variable pkgVar in pkgVars)
{
// Print variables only from the User namespace.
if (pkgVar.Namespace == "User")
{
Console.WriteLine("Variable: {0}, {1}", pkgVar.Name, pkgVar.Value.ToString());
}
}
Console.WriteLine("---------------------------");
// Loop over the collection using the Enumerator.
VariableEnumerator myEnum = pkg.Variables.GetEnumerator();
int i = 0;
while ((myEnum.MoveNext()) && (myEnum.Current != null))
// Again, show only the variables in the User namespace.
if (myEnum.Current.Namespace == "User")
{
Console.WriteLine("[{0}] {1}, {2}", i++, myEnum.Current.Name, myEnum.Current.Namespace);
}
myEnum.Reset();
Console.WriteLine("---------------------------");
//Using the Item method syntax of [x], obtain the
// first entry in the collection.
myVar = pkgVars[0];
Console.WriteLine("The name and namespace of the first variable is: {0}, {1}", myVar.Name, myVar.Namespace);
String nameOfFirstItem = pkgVars[0].Name;
Console.WriteLine("The name of the first variable is: {0}", nameOfFirstItem);
//}
}
}
}
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Text
Imports Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime
Namespace Adding_Variables
Class Program
Shared Sub Main(ByVal args() As String)
Dim app As Application = New Application()
' Load a sample package that contains a variable that sets the file name.
Dim pkg As Package = app.LoadPackage("C:\Program Files\Microsoft SQL Server\100\Samples\Integration Services\Package Samples\CalculatedColumns Sample\CalculatedColumns\CalculatedColumns.dtsx",Nothing)
Dim pkgVars As Variables = pkg.Variables
Dim myVar As Variable = pkg.Variables.Add("myCustomVar",False,"User","3")
' Verify whether the variable is in the collection now.
Dim hasMyVar As Boolean = pkg.Variables.Contains("myCustomVar")
Console.WriteLine("The variable was found? {0}", hasMyVar)
' Loop over the collection using the foreach keyword.
Dim pkgVar As Variable
For Each pkgVar In pkgVars
' Print variables only from the User namespace.
If pkgVar.Namespace = "User" Then
Console.WriteLine("Variable: {0}, {1}", pkgVar.Name, pkgVar.Value.ToString())
End If
Next
Console.WriteLine("---------------------------")
' Loop over the collection using the Enumerator.
Dim myEnum As VariableEnumerator = pkg.Variables.GetEnumerator()
Dim i As Integer = 0
While (myEnum.MoveNext()) &&(myEnum.Current <> Nothing)
Console.WriteLine("[{0}] {1}, {2}",i = Console.WriteLine("[{0}] {1}, {2}",i + 1
End While
myEnum.Reset()
Console.WriteLine("---------------------------")
'Using the Item method syntax of [x], obtain the
' first entry in the collection.
myVar = pkgVars(0)
Console.WriteLine("The name and namespace of the first variable is: {0}, {1}", myVar.Name, myVar.Namespace)
Dim nameOfFirstItem As String = pkgVars(0).Name
Console.WriteLine("The name of the first variable is: {0}", nameOfFirstItem)
'}
End Sub
End Class
End Namespace
Sample Output:
The variable was found? True
Variable: myCustomVar, 3
---------------------------
[0] myCustomVar, User
---------------------------
The name and namespace of the first variable is: CancelEvent, System
The name of the first variable is: CancelEvent