Gets the related binding adapter.

Namespace:  ESRI.ArcGISExplorer.Data

Assembly:  ESRI.ArcGISExplorer (in ESRI.ArcGISExplorer.dll) Version: 2.0.0.1500 (2.0.0.1500)

Syntax

C#
public TableBindingAdapter GetRelatedBindingAdapter(
	Row selectedRow,
	string relationshipName
)
Visual Basic (Declaration)
Public Function GetRelatedBindingAdapter ( _
	selectedRow As Row, _
	relationshipName As String _
) As TableBindingAdapter

Parameters

selectedRow
Type: ESRI.ArcGISExplorer.Data..::.Row

A Row object which represents a single record in the Table.
relationshipName
Type: System..::.String

A TableRelationship object which represents an association between two tables based on a shared column and could be either a geodatabase relationship class or a in-memory TableRelationship.

Return Value

A TableBindingAdapter object which can be used to wrap either a Table or a RowCollection to make them act like a .NET bindable data source.

Remarks

In order to use this method there must be a TableRelationship present between the two tables.

Examples

The code below illustrates how the GetRelatedBindingAdapter method could be used in a Windows Form to display rows in a DataGridView control which are related to a row in another DataGridView control.
CopyC#
{
  //Open the mountains fill geodatabase feature class
  Table mountains = Table.OpenFileGeodatabaseTable(@"C:\Data\Scotland.gdb", "mountains");

  //Create a new TableBindingAdapter object for the mountains Table
  TableBindingAdapter tableAdapter = new TableBindingAdapter(mountains);
  //Fill the adapter with all the rows from the mountains Table
  tableAdapter.Fill();

  //Set the UseCodedValueDomains property to display the descriptive name for the values in any
  //columns which have a CodedValueDomainDefined
  tableAdapter.UseCodedValueDomains = true;

  //Set the UseColumnAliasNames property to display alias names in the Column headers.
  tableAdapter.UseColumnAliasNames = true;        

  //Note that the BindingSource component and the DataGridView control would normally be
  //instantiated by dragging and dropping them onto a Windows Form from the toolbox.

  //Create a new BindingSource component
  System.Windows.Forms.BindingSource bindingSource1 = new System.Windows.Forms.BindingSource();
  //Set the DataSource to be the tableAdapter object
  bindingSource1.DataSource = tableAdapter;

  //Create a DataGridView control
  System.Windows.Forms.DataGridView dataGridView1 = new System.Windows.Forms.DataGridView();
  //Set the Datasource to be the bindingSource1 object 
  dataGridView1.DataSource = bindingSource1;
}
CopyVB.NET
'Open the mountains file geodatabase feature class
Dim mountainsTable As Table = Table.OpenFileGeodatabaseTable("C:\Data\Scotland.gdb", "mountains")

'Create a new TableBindingAdapter object for the mountains Table
Dim tableAdapter As TableBindingAdapter = New TableBindingAdapter(mountainsTable)

'Set the UseCodedValueDomains property to display the descriptive name for the values in any
'columns which have a CodedValueDomainDefined
tableAdapter.UseCodedValueDomains = True

'Set the UseColumnAliasNames property to display alias names in the Column headers.
tableAdapter.UseColumnAliasNames = True

'Fill the adapter with all the rows from the mountains Table
tableAdapter.Fill()

'Note that the BindingSource component and the DataGridView control would normally be
'instantiated by dragging and dropping them onto a Windows Form from the toolbox.


'Create a new BindingSource component
Dim bindingSource1 As System.Windows.Forms.BindingSource = New System.Windows.Forms.BindingSource()
'Set the DataSource to be the tableAdapter object
bindingSource1.DataSource = tableAdapter

'Create a DataGridView control
Dim dataGridView1 As System.Windows.Forms.DataGridView = New System.Windows.Forms.DataGridView()
'Set the Datasource to be the bindingSource1 object 
dataGridView1.DataSource = bindingSource1

See Also