Microsoft KB Archive/326145

= HOW TO: Implement a DataSet GROUP BY Helper Class in Visual C# .NET =

Article ID: 326145

Article Last Modified on 5/22/2003

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APPLIES TO


 * Microsoft .NET Framework 1.1 Service Pack 1
 * Microsoft Visual C# .NET 2002 Standard Edition

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This article was previously published under Q326145





For a Microsoft Visual Basic .NET version of this article, see 325685.

This article is one of a series of DataSetHelper articles. You can merge the code in the DataSetHelper class that is listed in this article with the code that is provided in other DataSetHelper articles to make a single class with a more comprehensive feature set.

Click here to view the complete list of DataSetHelper articles

This article refers to the following Microsoft .NET Framework Class Library namespace:
 * System.Data

IN THIS TASK

 * SUMMARY
 * Requirements
 * DataSetHelper Shell Class
 * Field List Parsers
 * CreateGroupByTable Method
 * InsertGroupByInto Method
 * SelectGroupByInto Method
 * Test the Application
 * Enhancement Ideas
 * Troubleshoot



SUMMARY
This step-by-step article describes how to implement and how to use a DataSetHelper class that includes sample code to create a DataTable object that contains aggregate data from another DataTable object.

To do this, use the following public methods:
 * CreateGroupByTable
 * InsertGroupByInto
 * SelectGroupByInto

The SelectGroupByInto method calls the CreateGroupByTable and the InsertGroupByInto methods. You can also use private helper methods and data members to store the parsed field list, and to handle NULL values correctly when the aggregate values are calculated.

The DataSetHelper class includes a DataSet member variable. Optionally, you can assign an existing DataSet. If the member variable points to a valid DataSet, any DataTable objects that the CreateGroupByTable or the SelectGroupByInto method creates are added to the DataSet. In either case, the method call returns a reference to the DataTable object. The InsertGroupByInto method requires an existing target DataTable, and does not return anything. For additional information about DataSet objects, click the following article number to view the article in the Microsoft Knowledge Base:

313485 INFO: Roadmap for ADO.NET DataSet, DataView, and DataViewManager

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Requirements
The following list outlines the recommended hardware, software, network infrastructure, and service packs that you need:
 * Microsoft Windows XP, Windows 2000, or Windows NT 4.0 Service Pack 6a
 * Microsoft Visual Studio .NET

This article assumes that you are familiar with the following topics:
 * Visual C# .NET syntax
 * ADO.NET fundamentals and syntax

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DataSetHelper Shell Class
The code in this section declares the shell class that all DataSetHelper articles add methods and member variables to.  Start Visual Studio .NET. On the File menu, point to New, and then click Project. In the New Project dialog box, click Visual C# Projects under Project Types, and then click Class Library under Templates. In the Name text box, type DataSetHelper. Click OK.  In the code, at the top of the code window, add the following line: using System.Data;   Replace the class code with the following code: public class DataSetHelper {   public DataSet ds; public DataSetHelper(ref DataSet DataSet) {       ds = DataSet; }   public DataSetHelper {       ds = null; } } The two overloads for the constructor allow you to create an instance of the class with or without a reference to a valid DataSet. For a class that contains a reference to a valid DataSet, the DataTable objects that the methods return are also added automatically to the DataSet. </li></ol>

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Field List Parsers
This section contains the code for two field list parsers: one for the field list, and one for the fields to group by. The parsed structure is used so that the CreateGroupByTable and InsertGroupByInto methods do not have to reparse the field list. These methods must reparse the field list if they are called from the SelectGroupByInto method or from your own code. The parsed field list and the unparsed field list are stored in Private member variables of the DataSetHelper class. <ol>  Add the following Private class definition in the DataSetHelper class that you created in the &quot;DataSetHelper Shell Class&quot; section: private class FieldInfo {   public string RelationName; public string FieldName;   //source table field name public string FieldAlias;  //destination table field name public string Aggregate; } Note This class is common to other DataSetHelper articles, and contains some fields that this article does not use. </li>  Add the following Private member variables to the class definition immediately after the DataSet declaration: private System.Collections.ArrayList m_FieldInfo; private string m_FieldList; private System.Collections.ArrayList GroupByFieldInfo; private string GroupByFieldList; </li>  Add the following Private method to the DataSetHelper class definition. This method is the same as the method that is used in other DataSetHelper articles and is used to parse the list of fields to group by. private void ParseFieldList(string FieldList, bool AllowRelation) {   /*     * This code parses FieldList into FieldInfo objects  and then * adds them to the m_FieldInfo private member *     * FieldList systax:  [relationname.]fieldname[ alias], ... */    if (m_FieldList == FieldList) return; m_FieldInfo = new System.Collections.ArrayList; m_FieldList = FieldList; FieldInfo Field; string[] FieldParts; string[] Fields=FieldList.Split(','); int i;   for (i=0; i<=Fields.Length-1; i++) {       Field=new FieldInfo; //parse FieldAlias FieldParts = Fields[i].Trim.Split(' '); switch (FieldParts.Length) {           case 1: //to be set at the end of the loop break; case 2: Field.FieldAlias=FieldParts[1]; break; default: throw new Exception(&quot;Too many spaces in field definition: '&quot; + Fields[i] + &quot;'.&quot;); }       //parse FieldName and RelationName FieldParts = FieldParts[0].Split('.'); switch (FieldParts.Length) {           case 1: Field.FieldName=FieldParts[0]; break; case 2: if (AllowRelation==false) throw new Exception(&quot;Relation specifiers not permitted in field list: '&quot; + Fields[i] + &quot;'.&quot;); Field.RelationName = FieldParts[0].Trim; Field.FieldName=FieldParts[1].Trim; break; default: throw new Exception(&quot;Invalid field definition: &quot; + Fields[i] + &quot;'.&quot;); }       if (Field.FieldAlias==null) Field.FieldAlias = Field.FieldName; m_FieldInfo.Add (Field); } } </li>  Add the following Private method to the class definition. This method is used to parse the field list, including aggregate functions. private void ParseGroupByFieldList(string FieldList) {   /*    * Parses FieldList into FieldInfo objects and adds them to the GroupByFieldInfo private member *    * FieldList syntax: fieldname[ alias]|operatorname(fieldname)[ alias],... *    * Supported Operators: count,sum,max,min,first,last */    if (GroupByFieldList == FieldList) return; GroupByFieldInfo = new System.Collections.ArrayList; FieldInfo Field; string[] FieldParts; string[] Fields = FieldList.Split(','); for (int i=0; i<=Fields.Length-1;i++) {   Field = new FieldInfo; //Parse FieldAlias FieldParts = Fields[i].Trim.Split(' '); switch (FieldParts.Length) {           case 1: //to be set at the end of the loop break; case 2: Field.FieldAlias = FieldParts[1]; break; default: throw new ArgumentException(&quot;Too many spaces in field definition: '&quot; + Fields[i] + &quot;'.&quot;); }       //Parse FieldName and Aggregate FieldParts = FieldParts[0].Split('(');       switch (FieldParts.Length)        {            case 1:                Field.FieldName = FieldParts[0];                break;            case 2:                Field.Aggregate = FieldParts[0].Trim.ToLower;    //we're doing a case-sensitive comparison later                Field.FieldName = FieldParts[1].Trim(' ', ')'); break; default: throw new ArgumentException(&quot;Invalid field definition: '&quot; + Fields[i] + &quot;'.&quot;); }       if (Field.FieldAlias==null) {           if (Field.Aggregate==null) Field.FieldAlias=Field.FieldName; else Field.FieldAlias = Field.Aggregate + &quot;of&quot; + Field.FieldName; }       GroupByFieldInfo.Add(Field); }   GroupByFieldList = FieldList; } </li></ol>

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CreateGroupByTable Method
This section contains the code for the CreateGroupByTable method.

The following is the calling convention for the CreateGroupByTable method: dt = dsHelper.CreateGroupByTable(&quot;OrderSummary&quot;, ds.Tables[&quot;Orders&quot;], &quot;EmployeeID,sum(Amount) Total,min(Amount) Min,max(Amount) Max&quot;); This call sample creates a new DataTable with a TableName of OrderSummary and four fields (EmployeeID, Total, Min, and Max). The four fields have the same data type as the EmployeeID and the Amount fields in the Orders table.

Use the following syntax to specify fields in the field list: fieldname[ alias]|aggregatefunction(fieldname)[ alias], ... Note the following for this syntax:
 * The ColumnName and the DataType properties are the only properties that are copied to the destination DataTable.
 * You can rename a field in the destination DataTable by specifying an alias name.
 * The field list can contain a subset of field names that are listed in a different order than in the source DataTable. If the field list is blank, an exception is thrown.
 * Relation specifiers are not supported as part of the field name. All fields must come from the same DataTable.

To call the CreateGroupByTable method, add the following method to the DataSetHelper class that you created in the &quot;DataSetHelper Shell Class&quot; section: public DataTable CreateGroupByTable(string TableName, DataTable SourceTable, string FieldList) {   /*     * Creates a table based on aggregates of fields of another table *     * RowFilter affects rows before GroupBy operation. No &quot;Having&quot; support * though this can be emulated by subsequent filtering of the table that results *     *  FieldList syntax: fieldname[ alias]|aggregatefunction(fieldname)[ alias], ... */    if (FieldList == null) {       throw new ArgumentException(&quot;You must specify at least one field in the field list.&quot;); //return CreateTable(TableName, SourceTable); }   else {       DataTable dt = new DataTable(TableName); ParseGroupByFieldList(FieldList); foreach (FieldInfo Field in GroupByFieldInfo) {           DataColumn dc  = SourceTable.Columns[Field.FieldName]; if (Field.Aggregate==null) dt.Columns.Add(Field.FieldAlias, dc.DataType, dc.Expression); else dt.Columns.Add(Field.FieldAlias, dc.DataType); }       if (ds != null) ds.Tables.Add(dt); return dt; } } back to the top

InsertGroupByInto Method
This section contains code for the InsertGroupByInto method.

The results are sorted on the fields that are listed in the GroupBy argument. The GroupBy argument must comply with a valid Sort field list (minus ASC and DESC modifiers). If the GroupBy argument is blank, the target DataTable contains only a single record that aggregates all the input. When you call the ParseGroupByFieldList and the ParseFieldList properties, you can parse lists that were previously parsed, if these lists are available. If the field list is blank, an exception is thrown.

This is the calling convention for the InsertGroupByInto method: dsHelper.InsertGroupByInto(ds.Tables[&quot;OrderSummary&quot;], ds.Tables[&quot;Orders&quot;],   &quot;EmployeeID,sum(Amount) Total,min(Amount) Min,max(Amount) Max&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID<5&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID&quot;); This call sample reads records from the DataTable that is named Orders and writes records to the DataTable that is named OrderSummary. The OrderSummary DataTable contains the EmployeeID field and three different aggregates of the Amount field that are filtered on &quot;EmployeeID<5&quot; and that are grouped on (and sorted by) EmployeeID.

Note The filter expression is applied before any aggregate functionality. To implement HAVING-type functionality, filter the resultant DataTable.

To call the InsertGroupByInto method, add the following method to the DataSetHelper class that you created in the &quot;DataSetHelper Shell Class&quot; section: public void InsertGroupByInto(DataTable DestTable, DataTable SourceTable, string FieldList,   string RowFilter, string GroupBy) {   /*     * Copies the selected rows and columns from SourceTable and inserts them into DestTable * FieldList has same format as CreateGroupByTable */    if (FieldList == null) throw new ArgumentException(&quot;You must specify at least one field in the field list.&quot;); ParseGroupByFieldList(FieldList);  //parse field list ParseFieldList(GroupBy,false);         //parse field names to Group By into an arraylist DataRow[] Rows = SourceTable.Select(RowFilter, GroupBy); DataRow LastSourceRow = null, DestRow = null; bool SameRow; int RowCount=0; foreach(DataRow SourceRow in Rows) {       SameRow=false; if (LastSourceRow!=null) {           SameRow=true; foreach(FieldInfo Field in m_FieldInfo) {               if (!ColumnEqual(LastSourceRow[Field.FieldName], SourceRow[Field.FieldName])) {                   SameRow=false; break; }           }            if (!SameRow) DestTable.Rows.Add(DestRow); }       if (!SameRow) {           DestRow = DestTable.NewRow; RowCount=0; }       RowCount+=1; foreach(FieldInfo Field in GroupByFieldInfo) {           switch(Field.Aggregate)    //this test is case-sensitive {               case null:        //implicit last case &quot;&quot;:       //implicit last case &quot;last&quot;: DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=SourceRow[Field.FieldName]; break; case &quot;first&quot;: if (RowCount==1) DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=SourceRow[Field.FieldName]; break; case &quot;count&quot;: DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=RowCount; break; case &quot;sum&quot;: DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=Add(DestRow[Field.FieldAlias], SourceRow[Field.FieldName]); break; case &quot;max&quot;: DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=Max(DestRow[Field.FieldAlias], SourceRow[Field.FieldName]); break; case &quot;min&quot;: if (RowCount==1) DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=SourceRow[Field.FieldName]; else DestRow[Field.FieldAlias]=Min(DestRow[Field.FieldAlias], SourceRow[Field.FieldName]); break; }       }        LastSourceRow = SourceRow; }   if(DestRow!=null) DestTable.Rows.Add(DestRow); }

private FieldInfo LocateFieldInfoByName(System.Collections.ArrayList FieldList, string Name) {   //Looks up a FieldInfo record based on FieldName foreach (FieldInfo Field in FieldList) {       if (Field.FieldName==Name) return Field; }   return null; }

private bool ColumnEqual(object a, object b) { /*    * Compares two values to see if they are equal. Also compares DBNULL.Value. *     * Note: If your DataTable contains object fields, you must extend this * function to handle them in a meaningful way if you intend to group on them. */    if ((a is DBNull) && (b is DBNull)) return true;   //both are null if ((a is DBNull) || (b is DBNull)) return false;   //only one is null return (a==b);   //value type standard comparison }

private object Min(object a, object b) { //Returns MIN of two values - DBNull is less than all others if ((a is DBNull) || (b is DBNull)) return DBNull.Value; if (((IComparable)a).CompareTo(b)==-1) return a;   else return b; }

private object Max(object a, object b) { //Returns Max of two values - DBNull is less than all others if (a is DBNull) return b;   if (b is DBNull) return a;   if (((IComparable)a).CompareTo(b)==1) return a;   else return b; }

private object Add(object a, object b) { //Adds two values - if one is DBNull, then returns the other if (a is DBNull) return b;   if (b is DBNull) return a;   return ((decimal)a + (decimal)b); } back to the top

SelectGroupByInto Method
This section contains the code for the SelectGroupByInto method. This method is a combination of the CreateGroupByTable and the InsertGroupByInto methods. The SelectGroupByInto method creates a new DataTable based on existing DataTable objects, and copies the records that are sorted and filtered to the new DataTable.

The following is the calling convention for the SelectGroupByInto method: dt = dsHelper.SelectGroupByInto(&quot;OrderSummary&quot;, ds.Tables[&quot;Employees&quot;],   &quot;EmployeeID,sum(Amount) Total,min(Amount) Min,max(Amount) Max&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID<5&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID&quot;); This call sample creates a new DataTable with a TableName of OrderSummary and four fields (EmployeeID, Total, Min, and Max). These four fields have the same data type as the EmployeeID and the Amount fields in the Orders table. Then this sample reads records from the Orders DataTable, and writes records to the OrderSummary DataTable. The OrderSummary DataTable contains the EmployeeID field and three different aggregates of the Amount field that are filtered on &quot;EmployeeID<5&quot; and that are grouped on (and sorted by) EmployeeID. If the GroupBy argument is blank, the target DataTable contains only a single record that aggregates all the input.

Note The filter expression is applied before any aggregate functionality. To implement HAVING-type functionality, filter the DataTable that results.

To call the SelectGroupByInto method, add the following method to the DataSetHelper class that you created in the &quot;DataSetHelper Shell Class&quot; section: public DataTable SelectGroupByInto(string TableName, DataTable SourceTable, string FieldList,   string RowFilter, string GroupBy) {   /*     * Selects data from one DataTable to another and performs various aggregate functions * along the way. See InsertGroupByInto and ParseGroupByFieldList for supported aggregate functions. */    DataTable dt = CreateGroupByTable(TableName, SourceTable, FieldList); InsertGroupByInto(dt, SourceTable, FieldList, RowFilter, GroupBy); return dt; } back to the top

Test the Application
<ol> Save, and then compile the DataSetHelper class that you created in the previous sections.</li> Follow these steps to create a new Visual C# Windows Application: <ol style="list-style-type: lower-alpha;"> Start Visual Studio .NET.</li> On the File menu, point to New, and then click Project.</li> In the New Project dialog box, click Visual C# Projects under Project Types, and then click Windows Application under Templates.</li></ol> </li> In Solution Explorer, right-click the solution, and then click Add Existing Project. Add the DataSetHelper project.</li> On the Project menu, click Add Reference.</li> In the Add Reference dialog box, click the Projects tab, and then add a reference to the DataSetHelper project to the Windows Form application.</li> In the form designer, drag three Button controls and a DataGrid control from the toolbox to the form. Name the buttons btnCreateGroupBy, btnInsertGroupByInto , and btnSelectGroupByInto. Keep the default name for the DataGrid control (DataGrid1).</li>  In the form code, add the following using statement to the top of the code window: using System.Data; </li>  Add the following variable declarations to the form definition: DataSet ds; DataSetHelper.DataSetHelper dsHelper; </li>  Add the following code to the Form_Load event: ds = new DataSet; dsHelper = new DataSetHelper.DataSetHelper(ref ds); //Create the source table DataTable dt = new DataTable(&quot;Orders&quot;); dt.Columns.Add(&quot;EmployeeID&quot;, Type.GetType(&quot;System.String&quot;)); dt.Columns.Add(&quot;OrderID&quot;, Type.GetType(&quot;System.Int32&quot;)); dt.Columns.Add(&quot;Amount&quot;, Type.GetType(&quot;System.Decimal&quot;)); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Sam&quot;, 5, 25.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Tom&quot;, 7, 50.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Sue&quot;, 9, 11.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Tom&quot;, 12, 7.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Sam&quot;, 14, 512.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Sue&quot;, 15, 17.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Sue&quot;, 22, 2.50}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Tom&quot;, 24, 3.00}); dt.Rows.Add(new object[] {&quot;Tom&quot;, 33, 78.75}); ds.Tables.Add(dt); </li> <li> Add the following code to the btnCreateGroupBy.Click event: dsHelper.CreateGroupByTable(&quot;OrderSummary&quot;, ds.Tables[&quot;Orders&quot;],    &quot;EmployeeID,count(EmployeeID) Orders,Sum(Amount) OrderTotal,max(Amount) BestOrder,min(Amount) WorstOrder&quot;); dataGrid1.SetDataBinding(ds, &quot;OrderSummary&quot;); </li> <li> Add the following code to the btnInsertGroupByInto.Click event: dsHelper.InsertGroupByInto(ds.Tables[&quot;OrderSummary&quot;], ds.Tables[&quot;Orders&quot;],    &quot;EmployeeID,count(EmployeeID) Orders,sum(Amount) OrderTotal,max(Amount) BestOrder,min(Amount) WorstOrder&quot;,     &quot;&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID&quot;); dataGrid1.SetDataBinding(ds, &quot;OrderSummary&quot;); </li> <li> Add the following code to the btnSelectGroupByInto.Click event: dsHelper.SelectGroupByInto(&quot;OrderSummary2&quot;, ds.Tables[&quot;Orders&quot;],    &quot;EmployeeID,count(EmployeeID) Orders,sum(Amount) OrderTotal,max(Amount) BestOrder,min(Amount) WorstOrder&quot;,     &quot;OrderID>10&quot;, &quot;EmployeeID&quot;); dataGrid1.SetDataBinding(ds, &quot;OrderSummary2&quot;); </li> <li>Run the application, and then click each of the buttons. Notice that the DataGrid is populated with the tables and data from the code.

Note You can only click the btnCreateGroupBy and the btnSelectGroupByInto buttons one time. If you click either of these buttons more than one time, you receive an error message that you are trying to add the same table two times. Additionally, you must click btnCreateGroupBy before you click btnInsertGroupByInto; otherwise, the destination DataTable is not created. If you click the btnInsertGroupByInto button multiple times, you populate the DataGrid with duplicate records.</li></ol>

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Enhancement Ideas

 * The ColumnName and the DataType properties are the only properties that are copied to the destination DataTable. You can extend the CreateTable method to copy additional properties, such as the MaxLength property, or you can create new key columns.
 * You can expand the functionality so that you can specify fields from related DataTable objects.
 * You can expand the functionality by adding support for additional aggregate functions, such as the AVG or the STDEV function. If you do this, you must have dynamically created variables to track intermediate values. To track intermediate values, you can add member variables to the FieldInfo class, and then use those member variables to store intermediate values.

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Troubleshoot

 * The fieldname and the alias parts of the field list must comply with DataColumn naming conventions. The parser also restricts the names, in that the name must not contain a period (.), a comma, or a space.
 * If you click a button more than one time, the same table is added two times to the DataSet. This results in an exception. To work around this problem, you can add code to the test application to check whether a DataTable of the same name already exists. Alternatively, you can create the DataSetHelper class without a reference to a DataSet, and then bind the DataGrid.DataSource property directly to the dt variable instead of by using the SetDataBinding method call.
 * If the source table uses custom data types (for example, a class), you must add code to the InsertGroupByInto method to perform a deep copy of the data. Otherwise, only a reference is copied.

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Keywords: kbhowtomaster KB326145

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