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Tips and Tricks
Saturday, August 16, 2014PrintSubscribe
Producing Reports in Binary Format

Application end users download the data reports by selecting menu options in the user interface.

Standard reporting options in an app with Touch UI produced with Code On Time application generator.

The report is produced in the requested format on the server and streamed back to the client browser. The report data is automatically filtered and sorted exactly as displayed to the end user.

A report produced in Microsoft Word format by an app with Touch UI created with Code On Time application generator.

Application developers may need to produce a report on the server with arbitrary filters and sort expression in response to the user actions. The report data file may be stored in the database, archived in the file system, or sent as an email attachment. Application framework offers a simple method that allows to do just that.

Consider the following sample business rule.

C#:

using System;
using System.Data;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text.RegularExpressions;
using System.Web;
using System.Web.Security;
using MyCompany.Data;
using MyCompany.Handlers;
using System.IO;
using MyCompany.Web;

namespace MyCompany.Rules
{
    public partial class CustomersBusinessRules : MyCompany.Data.BusinessRules
    {

        /// <summary>
        /// This method will execute in any view for an action
        /// with a command name that matches "Custom" and argument that matches "ProduceReport".
        /// </summary>
        [Rule("r100")]
        public void r100Implementation(string customerID, string companyName, string contactName,
            string contactTitle, string address, string city, string region, string postalCode,
            string country, string phone, string fax)
        {
            // This is the placeholder for method implementation.
            ReportArgs args = new ReportArgs();
            // controller
            args.Controller = "Orders";
            // sort expression
            args.SortExpression = "OrderDate desc";
            // data filter
            args.Filter = new FieldFilter[] {
                new FieldFilter  {
                    FieldName = "CustomerID",
                    Operation = RowFilterOperation.Equal,
                    Value = customerID
                }
            };
            // filter details
            args.FilterDetails = "This report has been produced on the server for customer " + companyName;
            // produce report in binary format
            byte[] reportData = Report.Execute(args);
            // save report to the local file system
            File.WriteAllBytes(Path.Combine(
                Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.MyDocuments), "Test.pdf"),
                reportData);
            // report the MIME type and file extension that go with the binary data
            Result.ShowAlert("MIME: {0}, Extension: {1}", args.MimeType, args.FileNameExtension);
        }
    }
}

Visual Basic:

Imports MyCompany.Data
Imports System
Imports System.Collections.Generic
Imports System.Data
Imports System.Linq
Imports System.Text.RegularExpressions
Imports System.Web
Imports System.Web.Security
Imports MyCompany.Handlers
Imports System.IO
Imports MyCompany.Web

Namespace MyCompany.Rules

    Partial Public Class CustomersBusinessRules
        Inherits MyCompany.Data.BusinessRules

        ''' <summary>
        ''' This method will execute in any view for an action
        ''' with a command name that matches "Custom" and argument that matches "ProduceReport".
        ''' </summary>
        <Rule("r100")> _
        Public Sub r100Implementation(ByVal customerID As String, ByVal companyName As String,
                                      ByVal contactName As String, ByVal contactTitle As String,
                                      ByVal address As String, ByVal city As String,
                                      ByVal region As String, ByVal postalCode As String,
                                      ByVal country As String, ByVal phone As String, ByVal fax As String)
            'This is the placeholder for method implementation.
            Dim args As ReportArgs = New ReportArgs()
            ' controller
            args.Controller = "Orders"
            ' sort expression
            args.SortExpression = "OrderDate desc"
            ' data filter
            args.Filter = New FieldFilter() {
                New FieldFilter With {
                    .FieldName = "CustomerID",
                    .Operation = RowFilterOperation.Equals,
                    .Value = customerID
                    }
                }
            ' filter details
            args.FilterDetails = "This report has been produced on the server for customer " + companyName
            ' produce report in binary format
            Dim reportData As Byte() = Report.Execute(args)
            ' save report to the local file system
            File.WriteAllBytes(Path.Combine(
                Environment.GetFolderPath(Environment.SpecialFolder.MyDocuments), "Test.pdf"),
                reportData)
            ' report the MIME type and file extension that go with the binary data
            Result.ShowAlert("MIME: {0}, Extension: {1}", args.MimeType, args.FileNameExtension)
        End Sub
    End Class
End Namespace

The code is executed in response to a custom action Produce Report selected in the context menu of application.

Custom action used to invoke a 'Code' business rule in an app with Touch UI creatd with Code On Time application builder.

Static method Report.Execute performs a server-side execution of the standard report action. The custom implementation of the “Code” business rule displays details about the produced binary data array.

Information about MIME type and file extension reporting by a business rule after producing a report in PDF format in an app with Touch UI.

This sample saves the report data to My Documents folder of the server computer. Here is the actual report.

This report has been generated by a custom action with the help of Report.Execute method invoked by custom business rule in an app with Touch UI produced with Code On Time.

Instance of a class ReportArgs exposes several properties that control the report rendering on the server.

Property Description
Controller Specifies the name of the data controller.
View Specifies the ID of the data controller view that will be used to produce data.
SortExpression Defines a sort expression that determines the order of data rows passed to the reporting engine for processing.
Filter Defines an array of filters applied to the report data passed to the reporting engine for processing.
FilterDetails Specifies the optional message displayed below the report header in standard reports.
Format Specifies the format of the output. The default format is Pdf. Other options are Word, Excel, and Image.
Template Name Specifies the name of the custom report template. If left blank, then a standard template is automatically created by application framework.
MimeType Indicates the MIME type of the report data produced by Microsoft Report Viewer. Use this property when sending report as an email attachment.
FileNameExtension Indicates the file name extension that matches the data produced by Microsoft Report Viewer. Use this property to provide a correct extension for the file name.
Friday, August 15, 2014PrintSubscribe
Improving Performance Of Reports in ASP.NET 4.0 and 4.5 Applications

Microsoft Report Viewer is the lightweight reporting engine used by generated apps to produce data reports in PDF, Word, Excel, and TIFF format. A generated app creates an in-memory table of data sorted and filtered according to the end user criteria. The data table is passed to Report Viewer to produce a report. The design template of the report is either created on-the-fly by the application framework or supplied by a developer at design time.

Report Viewer allows including formulas written in Visual Basic in the definitions of property expressions in various elements of a report template. The report formulas from the template are compiled to executable code by Report Viewer. If an ASP.NET web application tries to create a  report with the help of Microsoft Report Viewer, then certain security requirements must be satisfied. The formulas compiled by Report Viewer must run in “sandbox” environment.

ASP.NET security configuration has changed starting with ASP.NET 4.0. Now the sandbox of Report Viewer is required to jump through many hoops in order to produce a report. This results in poor performance of reports  on large datasets requiring significantly more time to complete rendering.

A simple solution exists to overcome this problem in an app created with Code On Time.

1) Select the project name on the start page of the app generator and choose Settings.

2) Proceed to Web Server Configuration and paste the following snippet into Web.Config modification instructions box:

AppendChild: /configuration/system.web

<trust legacyCasModel="true"/>

3) Click Finish and regenerate the project. A new <trust…/> entry will be created in the configuration file of application.

Now the reporting performance will become significantly improved.

Thursday, July 31, 2014PrintSubscribe
Creating Data Controller From Web Service

Code On Time web app generator automatically creates controllers for any specified tables and views from your database. In addition, you can define new controllers from any SQL query. One can also choose to display data from any data source using C# or Visual Basic business rules – you are only limited by your imagination.

In this example, let’s request a list of articles recently published on /blog. A sample application showing the blog posts can be seen below.

The list of posts retrieved from the web service is displayed in a list.

The URL that will be used to compose a REST request is the following:

http://www.blogger.com/feeds/2297698770491701674/posts/default/

You can see an example of the response with the essential items highlighted below.

<?xml version='1.0' encoding='UTF-8'?>
<?xml-stylesheet href="http://www.blogger.com/styles/atom.css" type="text/css"?>
<feed xmlns='http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom' ...>
  ...
  <entry>
    ...
    <published>2014-07-13T22:25:00.000-07:00</published>
    <updated>2014-07-15T00:03:46.566-07:00</updated>
    ...
    <title type='text'>
      Map View, Master-Detail Pages, 
      Custom Result Sets, Client-Side APIs
    </title>
    <content type='html'>
      &lt;p&gt;&lt;a title="Code On Time generator creates line-of-business Web Apps ...
    </content>
    ...
  </entry>
  <entry>
    ...
    <published>2014-07-13T10:00:00.000-07:00</published>
    <updated>2014-07-13T17:11:25.294-07:00</updated>
    ...
    <title type='text'>Assigning a Theme to a Page</title>
    <content type='html'>
      &lt;p&gt;&lt;a title="Code On Time Generator is a premier web application ...
    </content>
    ...
  </entry>
  ...
</feed>

The code business rule will need to accept this XML, create a data table and convert each “entry” element into a data row. The data rows will have four columns – Published, Updated, Title, and Content.

Defining the Controller

The first step is to define a controller that will handle the data table. One possible way of defining the controller would be to simply create it in the Project Designer. However, let’s take advantage of the automatic field, view, data field, and action generation provided by the Define Data Controller tool.

Start the Project Designer. In the Project Explorer, switch to the Controllers tab and press the New Controller icon.

Creating a new controller in the Project Explorer.

Give the controller a name:

Property Value
Name Posts

Press OK to save the new controller. Expand the new controller in the Project Explorer, and right-click on the Fields node. Select New Field option.

Creating a new field in the Posts controller.

Define the following properties:

Property Value
Name Title
Type String
Length 256

Press OK to save. Create another field with these properties:

Property Value
Name Content
Type String
Html Encoding False

Save the field, and add another:

Property Value
Name Published
Type DateTime

Save, and add the Updated field:

Property Value
Name Updated
Type DateTime

Save the last field. Right-click on the controller, and press Generate From Fields.

Generating the controller from the field definitions.

This will proceed to generate views, data fields, actions, and several code business rules to override CRUD operations. No command will be created.

The controller has been generated from the fields.

The first code business rule will provide an outline for defining the result set. The next three rules simply override the Insert, Update, and Delete actions and call PreventDefault() method. The developer must implement these rules in order for the respective actions to work.

On the toolbar, press Browse to regenerate the app and create the code files. When complete, right-click on Posts / Business Rules / Select (Code / Before) – GetData business rule, and press Edit Rule In Visual Studio.

Editing the rule in visual studio.

The file will open in Visual Studio. The business rule will create a DataTable object by calling to CreatePostsDataTable() method. The default implementation of this method will simply return a data table with no data.

[Rule("GetData")]
public void GetDataImplementation(
    string title, 
    string content, 
    DateTime? published, 
    DateTime? updated)
{
    ResultSet = CreatePostsDataTable();
}
        
private DataTable CreatePostsDataTable()
{
    DataTable dt = new DataTable();
    dt.Columns.Add("Title", typeof(String));
    dt.Columns.Add("Content", typeof(String));
    dt.Columns.Add("Published", typeof(DateTime));
    dt.Columns.Add("Updated", typeof(DateTime));
    // 
    // Populate rows of table "dt" with data from any source 
    // (web service, file system, database, etc.)
    //
    return dt;
}

Let’s complete the implementation by providing the data for the data table. At the top of the file, add the following using/import directive:

C#:

using System.Xml;

Visual Basic:

Imports System.Xml

Then, replace the “Populate rows of table” comment after the data table is declared with the following code. The code will make a request to Blogger, read in each “entry” element and create a new data row in the table using the values of that element.

C#:

// get data into table
XmlReader reader = XmlReader.Create(
    "http://www.blogger.com/feeds/2297698770491701674/posts/default/");
reader.ReadToDescendant("entry");
while (reader.LocalName == "entry")
{
    DataRow r = dt.NewRow();
    XmlReader subtree = reader.ReadSubtree();

    if (subtree.ReadToDescendant("published"))
    {
        r["Published"] = subtree.ReadElementContentAsDateTime("published",
            "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom");
        r["Updated"] = subtree.ReadElementContentAsDateTime("updated",
            "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom");
        while (subtree.LocalName != "title")
            subtree.Read();
        r["Title"] = subtree.ReadElementContentAsString("title",
            "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom");
        r["Content"] = subtree.ReadElementContentAsString("content",
            "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom");

        dt.Rows.Add(r);
    }

    if (!reader.ReadToFollowing("entry") || reader.EOF)
        break;
}

Visual Basic:

Dim reader As XmlReader = XmlReader.Create(
                "http://www.blogger.com/feeds/2297698770491701674/posts/default/")
reader.ReadToDescendant("entry")
While reader.LocalName = "entry"
    Dim r As DataRow = dt.NewRow()
    Dim subtree As XmlReader = reader.ReadSubtree()

    If subtree.ReadToDescendant("published") Then
        r("Published") = subtree.ReadElementContentAsDateTime("published",
                                                              "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom")
        r("Updated") = subtree.ReadElementContentAsDateTime("updated",
                                                            "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom")
        While subtree.LocalName <> "title"
            subtree.Read()
        End While
        r("Title") = subtree.ReadElementContentAsString("title",
                                                        "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom")
        r("Content") = subtree.ReadElementContentAsString("content",
                                                          "http://www.w3.org/2005/Atom")

        dt.Rows.Add(r)
    End If

    If Not reader.ReadToFollowing("entry") OrElse reader.EOF Then
        Exit While
    End If
End While

Make sure to save the file.

Adding the Page and Viewing the Results

Switch back to the Project Designer. Right-click on the Posts controller node, and press Copy.

Copying the 'Posts' controller.

Switch to the Pages tab in the Project Explorer. Click on the New Page icon.

Creating a new page from the Project Explorer.

Assign a name.

Property Value
Name Posts

Press OK to save the page. Drag the new page in the Project Explorer to the right of Home page node to place it second in the site menu.

Dropping the page on the left side of the Home page node.     The 'Posts' page has been placed second in the site menu.

Right-click on the new page and press Paste to bind the controller to the page.

Pasting onto the 'Posts' page.     The data controller has been bound with a data view.

On the toolbar, press Browse to generate and open the web app in the default browser. The list of posts retrieved from the web service is displayed on the page. Note that you must define a primary key before any of the items can be selected.