ActiveX Data Objects
From Free net encyclopedia
Microsoft ADO (ActiveX Data Objects) is a Component object model object for accessing data sources. It provides a layer between programming languages and OLE DB (a means of accessing data stores, whether they be databases or otherwise, in a uniform manner), which allows a developer to write programs which access data, without knowing how the database is implemented. You must be aware of your database for connection only. No knowledge of SQL is required to access a database when using ADO, although one can use ADO to execute arbitrary SQL commands. The disadvantage of this is that this introduces a dependency upon the database.
It is positioned as a successor to Microsoft's earlier object layers for accessing data sources, including RDO (Remote Data Objects) and DAO (Data Access Objects). ADO was introduced by Microsoft in the winter of 1996.
ADO consists of several top-level objects:
- Connection (represents the connection to the database)
- Recordset (represents a set of database records)
- Command (represents a SQL command)
- Record (represents a set of data, typically from a source other than a database)
- Stream (represents a stream of data, as from a text file or web page)
- Error (stores errors)
- Field (represents a database field)
- Parameter (represents a SQL parameter)
- Property (stores information about objects)
ADO component is used in conjunction with a high-level language, such as VBScript in an Active Server Pages (ASP) environment, or Visual Basic. Even Delphi, a development environment from Microsoft rival Borland Coporation, now allows the use of ADO to access various databases.
In the newer programming framework of .NET, Microsoft also presented an upgraded version of ADO called ADO.NET. Its object structure is quite different from that of traditional ADO. Traditional ADO is still very popular, and is often perceived as being more mature.
Here is an ASP example using ADO to select the "Name" field, from a table called "Phonebook", where a "PhoneNumber" was equal to "555-5555".
dim myconnection, myrecordset, name set myconnection = server.createobject("ADODB.Connection") set myrecordset = server.createobject("ADODB.Recordset")
myconnection.open mydatasource myrecordset.open "Phonebook", myconnection myrecordset.find "PhoneNumber = '555-5555'" name = myrecordset.fields.item("Name") myrecordset.close set myrecordset = nothing set myconnection = nothing
This is equivalent to the following ASP code, which uses plain SQL, instead of the functionality of the Recordset object:
dim myconnection, myrecordset, name set myconnection = server.createobject("ADODB.connection") myconnection.open mydatasource set myrecordset = myconnection.execute("SELECT Name FROM Phonebook WHERE PhoneNumber = '555-5555'") name = myrecordset(0) myrecordset.close set myrecordset = nothing set myconnection = nothing
External links
- Microsoft ADO page
- ADO database connection strings
- Database connection strings
- ASP.NET: Accessing Data with C#da:ADO
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