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.NET Framework 4.5.2+

Implement File Data Properties

  • 4 minutes to read

This topic demonstrates how to implement a business class with a file data property and a file collection property. For this purpose, the Resume class, which is used to store and manage an employee’s resume information, is implemented. It has three properties: File, Contact and Portfolio. The File property provides a file, the Contact property contains a reference to the Contact class, and the Portfolio property returns a collection of the employee’s files.

To add a file data type property and a file collection property to a business object, you should use a type that implements the IFileData interface and one that applies the FileAttachment attribute. In this instance, the FileAttachmentsWindowsFormsModule, FileAttachmentsAspNetModule, or FileAttachmentsBlazorModule modules should be added to your WinForms, ASP.NET Web, or ASP.NET Core Blazor module projects respectively. If your solution does not contain these projects, add it to application projects. These modules contain Property Editors for IFileData type properties, and Controllers with Actions that are necessary for file manipulation. For details, refer to the File Attachments Module Overview topic.

To add the FileAttachmentsWindowsFormsModule or FileAttachmentsAspNetModule module to a .NET Framework application, invoke the Module Designer for the WinForms or ASP.NET Web Forms module project, drag the corresponding item from the Toolbox to the Designer’s Required Modules section, and rebuild the solution.

To add the FileAttachmentsWindowsFormsModule or FileAttachmentsBlazorModule module to a .NET application, install the DevExpress.ExpressApp.FileAttachment.Win or DevExpress.ExpressApp.FileAttachment.Blazor NuGet package to the WinForms or ASP.NET Core Blazor module project. If your solution does not contain these projects, add the corresponding project to an application project. Add the File Attachment Module to the platform-specific module’s RequiredModuleTypes collection. Rebuild the solution. For more information, refer to the Reuse Implemented Functionality topic.

Tip

In .NET applications, you can call the AddFileAttachments(IModuleBuilder<IWinApplicationBuilder>, Action<FileAttachmentsOptions>) method in your ASP.NET Core Blazor/WinForms application builder.

The following code demonstrates a Resume business object.

[DefaultClassOptions]
public class Resume : BaseObject {
   public Resume(Session session) : base(session) {}
   private FileData file;
   [Aggregated, ExpandObjectMembers(ExpandObjectMembers.Never)]
   public FileData File {
      get { return file; }
      set {
         SetPropertyValue(nameof(File), ref file, value);
      }
   }
  [Aggregated, Association("Resume-PortfolioFileData")]
  public XPCollection<PortfolioFileData> Portfolio {
     get { return GetCollection<PortfolioFileData>(nameof(Portfolio)); }
  }
}
public class PortfolioFileData : FileAttachmentBase {
   public PortfolioFileData(Session session) : base(session) {}
   private DocumentType documentType;
   protected Resume resume;
   [Persistent, Association("Resume-PortfolioFileData")]
   public Resume Resume {
      get { return resume; }
      set { 
         SetPropertyValue(nameof(Resume), ref resume, value); 
      }
   }
   public override void AfterConstruction() {
      base.AfterConstruction();
      documentType = DocumentType.Unknown;
   }
   public DocumentType DocumentType {
      get { return documentType; }
      set { SetPropertyValue(nameof(DocumentType), ref documentType, value);}
   }
}
public enum DocumentType { SourceCode = 1, Tests = 2, Documentation = 3, 
   Diagrams = 4, ScreenShots = 5, Unknown = 6 };

To create a collection of an employee’s files, the Resume class has the Portfolio property of the XPCollection<PortfolioFileData> type. The PortfolioFileData class is inherited from the FileAttachmentBase class, which in turn, uses the FileAttachment interface. The FileAttachmentBase class and the FileAttachment attribute are the parts of the Business Objects Library.

The PortfolioFileData class has the DocumentType property that specifies the portfolio file type. This property is initialized in the AfterConstruction method override. The PortfolioFileData class also stores a reference to a Resume object in its Resume property.

The following images show the Resume Detail View in WinForms, ASP.NET Web, and ASP.NET Core Blazor applications.

WinForms
ResumeInWin

ASP.NET Web Forms
ResumeInWeb

Blazor
ResumeInBlazor

See Also