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ConsumerConnectionPoint Constructor

Definition

Initializes a new instance of the ConsumerConnectionPoint class.

public:
 ConsumerConnectionPoint(System::Reflection::MethodInfo ^ callbackMethod, Type ^ interfaceType, Type ^ controlType, System::String ^ displayName, System::String ^ id, bool allowsMultipleConnections);
public ConsumerConnectionPoint (System.Reflection.MethodInfo callbackMethod, Type interfaceType, Type controlType, string displayName, string id, bool allowsMultipleConnections);
new System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts.ConsumerConnectionPoint : System.Reflection.MethodInfo * Type * Type * string * string * bool -> System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts.ConsumerConnectionPoint
Public Sub New (callbackMethod As MethodInfo, interfaceType As Type, controlType As Type, displayName As String, id As String, allowsMultipleConnections As Boolean)

Parameters

callbackMethod
MethodInfo

The method in the consumer control that returns an interface instance to consumers to establish a connection.

interfaceType
Type

The Type of the interface that the consumer receives from a provider.

controlType
Type

The Type of the consumer control with which the consumer connection point is associated.

displayName
String

A friendly display name for the consumer connection point that appears to users in the connection user interface (UI).

id
String

A unique identifier for the consumer connection point.

allowsMultipleConnections
Boolean

A Boolean value indicating whether the consumer connection point can have multiple simultaneous connections with providers.

Exceptions

callbackMethod is null.

-or-

interfaceType is null.

-or-

controlType is null.

-or-

displayName is null or an empty string ("").

controlType is not the same type as the consumer control (or a valid class derived from it).

Examples

The following code example demonstrates how to derive from the ConsumerConnectionPoint class to create a custom provider connection point.

The code example has three parts:

  • A source file that contains a provider WebPart control, a consumer WebPart control, and a custom ConsumerConnectionPoint object.

  • A Web page that hosts the controls in a static connection.

  • An explanation of how to run the example code.

The first part of the code example is the source for the provider and consumer WebPart controls, and a custom ConsumerConnectionPoint class, named TableConsumerConnectionPoint. Note that the constructor of the TableConsumerConnectionPoint class calls the base constructor, passing it the required parameters as indicated in the Parameters section. Also note that in the TableConsumer class, the SetConnectionInterface method is specified as the callback method for connections, and the ConnectionConsumer attribute declares the custom TableConsumerConnectionPoint as a parameter. This demonstrates how to create a custom consumer connection point and then associate it with a consumer control. This example assumes that the source code is dynamically compiled, so you should place the source code file in an App_Code subfolder of your Web application.

using System;
using System.Collections;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Reflection;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.UI;
using System.Security.Permissions;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls;
using System.Web.UI.WebControls.WebParts;

//This sample code creates a Web Parts control that acts as a provider of table data.
namespace Samples.AspNet.CS.Controls
{
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.Demand,
    Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.InheritanceDemand,
    Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
    public sealed class TableProviderWebPart : WebPart, IWebPartTable
    {
        DataTable _table;

        public TableProviderWebPart()
        {
            _table = new DataTable();

            DataColumn col = new DataColumn();
            col.DataType = typeof(string);
            col.ColumnName = "Name";
            _table.Columns.Add(col);

            col = new DataColumn();
            col.DataType = typeof(string);
            col.ColumnName = "Address";
            _table.Columns.Add(col);

            col = new DataColumn();
            col.DataType = typeof(int);
            col.ColumnName = "ZIP Code";
            _table.Columns.Add(col);

            DataRow row = _table.NewRow();
            row["Name"] = "John Q. Public";
            row["Address"] = "123 Main Street";
            row["ZIP Code"] = 98000;
            _table.Rows.Add(row);
        }

        public PropertyDescriptorCollection Schema
        {
            get
            {
                return TypeDescriptor.GetProperties(_table.DefaultView[0]);
            }
        }
        public void GetTableData(TableCallback callback)
        {
                callback(_table.Rows);
        }

        public bool ConnectionPointEnabled
        {
            get
            {
                object o = ViewState["ConnectionPointEnabled"];
                return (o != null) ? (bool)o : true;
            }
            set
            {
                ViewState["ConnectionPointEnabled"] = value;
            }
        }

        [ConnectionProvider("Table", typeof(TableProviderConnectionPoint), AllowsMultipleConnections = true)]
        public IWebPartTable GetConnectionInterface()
        {
            return new TableProviderWebPart();
        }

        public class TableProviderConnectionPoint : ProviderConnectionPoint
        {
            public TableProviderConnectionPoint(MethodInfo callbackMethod, Type interfaceType, Type controlType,
            string name, string id, bool allowsMultipleConnections) : base(
                callbackMethod, interfaceType, controlType,
                name, id, allowsMultipleConnections)
            {
            }
            public override bool GetEnabled(Control control)
            {
                return ((TableProviderWebPart)control).ConnectionPointEnabled;
            }
        }
    }
    
    // This code sample demonstrates a custom WebPart controls that acts as 
    // a consumer in a Web Parts connection.
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.Demand,
    Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
  [AspNetHostingPermission(SecurityAction.InheritanceDemand,
    Level = AspNetHostingPermissionLevel.Minimal)]
  public class TableConsumer : WebPart
  {
    private IWebPartTable _provider;
    private ICollection _tableData;

    private void GetTableData(object tableData)
    {
      _tableData = (ICollection)tableData;
    }

    protected override void OnPreRender(EventArgs e)
    {
      if (_provider != null)
      {
        _provider.GetTableData(new TableCallback(GetTableData));
      }
    }

    protected override void RenderContents(HtmlTextWriter writer)
    {
      if (_provider != null)
      {
        PropertyDescriptorCollection props = _provider.Schema;
        int count = 0;
        if (props != null && props.Count > 0 && _tableData != null)
        {
          foreach (PropertyDescriptor prop in props)
          {
            foreach (DataRow o in _tableData)
            {
              writer.Write(prop.DisplayName + ": " + o[count]);
            }
            writer.WriteBreak();
            writer.WriteLine();
            count = count + 1;
          }
        }
        else
        {
          writer.Write("No data");
        }
      }
      else
      {
        writer.Write("Not connected");
      }
    }
    [ConnectionConsumer("Table")]
    public void SetConnectionInterface(IWebPartTable provider)
    {
      _provider = provider;
    }

    public class TableConsumerConnectionPoint : ConsumerConnectionPoint
    {
      public TableConsumerConnectionPoint(MethodInfo callbackMethod, Type interfaceType, Type controlType,
      string name, string id, bool allowsMultipleConnections)
        : base(
        callbackMethod, interfaceType, controlType,
        name, id, allowsMultipleConnections)
      {
      }
    }
  }
}

The second part of the code example is the Web page that hosts the custom controls in a static Web parts connection. At the top of the page is a Register directive to declare a prefix and the namespace for the custom controls. The connection is declared by using an <asp:webpartconnection> element, and the provider and consumer controls are declared within an <asp:webpartzone> element.

<%@ page language="C#" %>
<%@ register tagprefix="aspSample" 
    namespace="Samples.AspNet.CS.Controls" %>

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN"
    "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd">
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" >
<head runat="server">
    <title>IField Test Page</title>
</head>
<body>
    <form id="form1" runat="server">
    <div>
        <asp:webpartmanager id="WebPartManager1" runat="server">
            <StaticConnections>
                <asp:WebPartConnection id="wp1" ProviderID="provider1" ConsumerID="consumer1">
                </asp:WebPartConnection>
            </StaticConnections>
        </asp:webpartmanager>
        <asp:webpartzone id="WebPartZone1" runat="server">
          <zoneTemplate>
            <aspSample:TableProviderWebPart ID="provider1" runat="server" 
              ToolTip="Web Parts Table Provider Control" />
            <aspSample:TableConsumer ID="consumer1" runat="server" 
              ToolTip="Web Parts Table Consumer Control"/>
          </zoneTemplate>
        </asp:webpartzone>
    </div>
    </form>
</body>
</html>

Load the page in a browser. The connection between the controls already exists, and the consumer displays the data from the provider, because the connection was declared as a static connection in the page.

Remarks

The ConsumerConnectionPoint constructor for the ConsumerConnectionPoint class simply calls the base constructor, passing to it the various parameters and initializing the base class.

The base class constructor checks a number of the parameters for a connection point and can throw several exceptions. For a list of possible exceptions, see the Exceptions section.

You can call the ConsumerConnectionPoint constructor to create your own instance of the ConsumerConnectionPoint class. However, in cases where you are simply establishing a connection and not extending the class, you should call the GetConsumerConnectionPoints method to return a connection point object from a provider.

Applies to

See also