Class EmailFolderRows
Corresponds to an email folder on a mail server Collection of EmailFolderRow. Each element of the collection represents one row in the EmailFolder table.
Inheritance
Implements
Inherited Members
Namespace: SuperOffice.CRM.Rows
Assembly: SoDataBase.dll
Syntax
public class EmailFolderRows : TableRowsBase, INestedPersist, IEnumerable<INestedPersist>, INotifyCollectionChanged, IBindingList, IList, ICollection, IEnumerable
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
Properties
this[int]
Get a EmailFolderRow given its index in the collection.
Declaration
public EmailFolderRow this[int index] { get; }
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| int | index | Index of the EmailFolderRow in the collection |
Property Value
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
Methods
Add(EmailFolderRow)
Add one EmailFolderRow to the collection.
Declaration
public int Add(EmailFolderRow row)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow | row | An instance of EmailFolderRow to be added to the collection. |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| int | The index of the added EmailFolderRow. |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
AddNew()
Add a new instance of EmailFolderRow added to the collection.
Declaration
public EmailFolderRow AddNew()
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow | A new instance of EmailFolderRow added to the collection. |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
AddRange(IEnumerable<EmailFolderRow>)
Add a range of EmailFolderRow to the collection.
Declaration
public EmailFolderRows AddRange(IEnumerable<EmailFolderRow> rows)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| IEnumerable<EmailFolderRow> | rows |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRows | The updated EmailFolderRows collection object. |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
CreateChild()
Create a new instance of EmailFolderRow
Declaration
protected override TableRowBase CreateChild()
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| TableRowBase | New instance of EmailFolderRow |
Overrides
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
CreateNew()
Create a new instance of the EmailFolderRows object. This collection will contain no rows.
Declaration
public static EmailFolderRows CreateNew()
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRows | A new instance of the EmailFolderRows object. |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
Find(Predicate<EmailFolderRow>)
Apply the predicate to each element of the collection and return the first row that matches; if no match then return null
Declaration
public EmailFolderRow Find(Predicate<EmailFolderRow> condition)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Predicate<EmailFolderRow> | condition |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
FindAll(Predicate<EmailFolderRow>)
Return a new collection that contains only those elements that match the condition. Elements are shared, not clones! of the original collection
Declaration
public EmailFolderRows FindAll(Predicate<EmailFolderRow> condition)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Predicate<EmailFolderRow> | condition |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRows |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
ForEach(Action<EmailFolderRow>)
Method that iterates over all members and applies the action parameter to each of them
Declaration
public void ForEach(Action<EmailFolderRow> whatToDo)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| Action<EmailFolderRow> | whatToDo |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
GetFromCustomSearchAsync(CustomSearch, CancellationToken)
Create a new instance of the EmailFolderRows object, and populate it with data from a custom search. If the search returns no results, an empty collection will be returned; if the result contains rows, a collection of EmailFolderRow objects representing each row will be returned.
Declaration
public static Task<EmailFolderRows> GetFromCustomSearchAsync(EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch query, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch | query | The custom search to execute against the database |
| CancellationToken | cancellationToken |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Task<EmailFolderRows> | A new instance of the EmailFolderRows object, reflecting the result of the query. |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
GetFromIdxAccountIdAsync(int, CancellationToken)
Create a new instance of the EmailFolderRow object, by querying the database table via the index 'IDXEmail_folderAccount_id'. This method is intended to make it easy to use efficient queries that match a database index.
Declaration
public static Task<EmailFolderRows> GetFromIdxAccountIdAsync(int accountId, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| int | accountId | |
| CancellationToken | cancellationToken |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Task<EmailFolderRows> | Row object that represents the result of the search. IsNew will be true if the query did not match any row in the table |
Remarks
This method represents one of the unique indexes on the EmailFolder table. Non-unique indexes have corresponding inner classes and methods in the EmailFolderRows collection, since they may return more than one row.
GetFromReaderAsync(SoDataReader, EmailFolderTableInfo, CancellationToken)
Create a new instance of the EmailFolderRows object, and populate it with data from a reader. If the search returns no results, an empty collection will be returned; if the result contains rows, a collection of EmailFolderRow objects representing each row will be returned.
Note that the internal logic starts by calling reader.Read(), which is correct if you hand the method the result of an ExecuteReader(), but if the reader has already been advanced one or more rows, the current row will be skipped and collection population will start with the next row.Declaration
public static Task<EmailFolderRows> GetFromReaderAsync(SoDataReader reader, EmailFolderTableInfo tableInfo, CancellationToken cancellationToken = default)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| SoDataReader | reader | SoDataReader positioned to a valid database row. |
| EmailFolderTableInfo | tableInfo | EmailFolderTableInfo instance used in the query that is the source of the reader. The fields used from the reader will be those owned by this tableinfo object. |
| CancellationToken | cancellationToken |
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| Task<EmailFolderRows> |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
Remove(EmailFolderRow)
Removes the given EmailFolderRow from the collection
Declaration
public void Remove(EmailFolderRow row)
Parameters
| Type | Name | Description |
|---|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow | row | the EmailFolderRow to be removed |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
ToArray()
Corresponds to an email folder on a mail server Collection of EmailFolderRow. Each element of the collection represents one row in the EmailFolder table.
Declaration
public EmailFolderRow[] ToArray()
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| EmailFolderRow[] |
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.
ToString()
For debugging: Number of members, and the first (up to) 5 items
Declaration
public override string ToString()
Returns
| Type | Description |
|---|---|
| string |
Overrides
Remarks
Row collections can be created in several ways.
- Use the static CreateNew() method to create a new, empty collection. You can then add objects of type EmailFolderRow to it, and use methods like Save to operate on the whole collection.
- You can create a (nested) EmailFolderRows EmailFolderRows.CustomSearch object to obtain a query pre-populated with the correct tableinfo and return fields. This query can be modified with restrictions, etc. Then, use the static GetFromCustomSearch method to apply the query to the database and obtain the result as a Rows object, with one item for each table row that matched your query.
- For each non-unique index defined for the table, there is a corresponding GetFromIdx method to make retrieving data via the indexes easy.