The program i got is able to load CSV and Excel files in to a datagridview.
This works perfectly fine except the CSV files retain old data.
For example, the CSV file has 30 values. i load the data in to the datagridview and it works fine.
I close the application and i then edit the CSV file removing 26 of the rows. The next time i open the application and load the file it still get's the version with 30 values even tho that file no longer exists.
To be clear, i open and edit the file in Notepad and it works as intended, but even after editing it in notepad my Winform application seems to load the previous version. Even if i rename the file it still takes the data that should no longer exist. Even after completely restarting the PC the file still retains data that should not exist.
BUT! If i move the file to a different folder (add new folder and just throw it in there) it does load the new data...
EDIT:
It seems that it is actually loading all CSV files in the folder. (including older versions)
what could cause this problem? Seeing the Excel files are not experiencing this problem.
The code used:
private void OpenExcel()
{
OpenFileDialog openFileDialog1 = new OpenFileDialog
{
InitialDirectory = #"C:\",
Title = "Browse Text Files",
CheckFileExists = true,
CheckPathExists = true,
DefaultExt = "txt",
FilterIndex = 2,
RestoreDirectory = true,
ReadOnlyChecked = true,
ShowReadOnly = true,
Filter = "Excel Worksheets|*.csv"
};
if (openFileDialog1.ShowDialog() == DialogResult.OK)
{
FileLocation = openFileDialog1.FileName;
GetExcelSheetNames(openFileDialog1.FileName);
MyConnection = new OleDbConnection(connString);
MyCommand = new OleDbDataAdapter("select * from [" + SheetName + "]", MyConnection);
MyCommand.TableMappings.Add("Table", "TestTable");
Datatable_Temp = new DataTable();
MyCommand.Fill(Datatable_Temp);
MyConnection.Close();
}
else
{
Canceled = true;
}
}
private string GetExcelSheetNames(string excelFile)
{
OleDbConnection objConn = null;
DataTable dt = null;
string CSVOrNot = excelFile.Substring(excelFile.Length - 3);
try
{
// Connection String.
if (CSVOrNot == "csv")
{
connString = string.Format(#"Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OleDb.4.0; Data Source={0};Extended Properties=""Text;HDR=YES;FMT=Delimited""", Path.GetDirectoryName(excelFile));
}
else
{
connString = "Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0; Data Source=" + excelFile + ";Extended Properties=Excel 12.0;";
}
// Create connection object by using the preceding connection string.
objConn = new OleDbConnection(connString);
// Open connection with the database.
objConn.Open();
// Get the data table containg the schema guid.
dt = objConn.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
if (dt == null)
{
MessageBox.Show("No Data Found");
return null;
}
SheetName = dt.Rows[0]["TABLE_NAME"].ToString();
return SheetName;
}
catch
{
return null;
}
finally
{
// Clean up.
if (objConn != null)
{
objConn.Close();
objConn.Dispose();
}
if (dt != null)
{
dt.Dispose();
}
}
}
i Found the issue, it was different then i thought.
Seeing older versions of the file were also in the folder i didn't notice that it wasn't taking an older version of itself but it was simply merging all CSV files in to the output.
I searched for this instead and found the following post:
c# reading csv file gives not a valid path
i added an if clause to see if the file is a csv file and then use the following:
Because the difference between opening an Excel or a CSV file is is that the Excel file asked for path and file name while CSV only wants the path and later on a query to select the file...a bit odd but ok.
MyCommand = new OleDbDataAdapter("SELECT * FROM [" + Path.GetFileName(openFileDialog1.FileName) + "]", MyConnection);
Related
Additional information: The Microsoft Office Access database engine could not find the object 'C:\Users\username\Documents\sampleData.xls'. Make sure the object exists and that you spell its name and the path name correctly.
The Error is highlighted at
theDataAdapter.Fill(spreadSheetData);
Here's the sample data I used (tried in .csv , .xls , .xlsx )
Name Age Status Children
Johnny 34 Married 3
Joey 21 Single 1
Michael 16 Dating 0
Smith 42 Divorced 4
Here's the code associated:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.ComponentModel;
using System.Data;
using System.Drawing;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.Threading.Tasks;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.IO;
using System.Data.OleDb;
namespace uploadExcelFile
{
public partial class Form1 : Form
{
public Form1()
{
InitializeComponent();
}
private void btnImport_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
var frmDialog = new System.Windows.Forms.OpenFileDialog();
if (frmDialog.ShowDialog() == System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult.OK)
{
string strFileName = frmDialog.FileName;
System.IO.FileInfo spreadSheetFile = new System.IO.FileInfo(strFileName);
scheduleGridView.DataSource = spreadSheetFile.ToString();
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(frmDialog.FileName);
System.Diagnostics.Debug.WriteLine(frmDialog.SafeFileName);
String name = frmDialog.SafeFileName;
String constr = String.Format(#"Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source={0};Extended Properties=""Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=YES""", frmDialog.FileName);
OleDbConnection myConnection = new OleDbConnection(constr);
OleDbCommand onlineConnection = new OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM [" + frmDialog.FileName + "]", myConnection);
myConnection.Open();
OleDbDataAdapter theDataAdapter = new OleDbDataAdapter(onlineConnection);
DataTable spreadSheetData = myConnection.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
theDataAdapter.Fill(spreadSheetData);
scheduleGridView.DataSource = spreadSheetData;
}
}
}
}
scheduleGridView is the DataGridViews name, & btnImport is the name for the import Button.
I've installed 2007 Office System Driver: Data Connectivity Components; which gave me the AccessDatabaseEngine.exe, but from there I've been stuck here without understanding how to get around this. It should go without saying that the filepath is correct in its entirety. There is no odd characters in the path name either (spaces, underlines, etc)
Mini Update :: (another dead end it seems like)
Although the initial error says, "could not find the object 'C:\Users\username\Documents\sampleData.xls'"
In the Debugger the exception is read as
When I look at details the exception as "C:\Users\username\Documents\sampleData.xls"
So I thought the error was that it wasn't taking the path as a literal, but this article C# verbatim string literal not working. Very Strange backslash always double
Shows very clearly that that is not my issue.
I am guessing you may be mistaken by what is returned from the following line of code…
DataTable spreadSheetData = myConnection.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
The DataTable returned from this line will have nine (9) columns (TABLE_CATALOG, TABLE_SCHEMA, TABLE_NAME, TABLE_TYPE, TABLE_GUID, DESCRIPTION, TABLE_PROPID, DATE_CREATED and DATE_MODIFIED). This ONE (1) DataTable returned simply “Describes” the worksheet(s) and named range(s) in the entire selected Excel workbook. Each row in this DataTable represent either a worksheet OR a named range. To distinguish worksheets from named ranges, the “TABLE_NAME” column in this DataTable has the name of the worksheet or range AND ends each “Worksheet” Name with a dollar sign ($). If the “TABLE_NAME” value in a row does NOT end in dollar sign, then it is a range and not a worksheet.
Therefore, when the line
OleDbDataAdapter theDataAdapter = new OleDbDataAdapter(onlineConnection);
Blows up and says it cannot file the “filename” error… is somewhat expected because this line is looking for a “worksheet” name, not a filename. On the line creating the select command…
OleDbCommand onlineConnection = new OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM [" + frmDialog.FileName + "]", myConnection);
This is incorrect; you have already selected the filename and open the file with
String constr = String.Format(#"Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source={0};Extended Properties=""Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=YES""", frmDialog.FileName);
OleDbConnection myConnection = new OleDbConnection(constr);
myConnection.Open();
The correct OleDbCommand line should be…
OleDbCommand onlineConnection = new OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM [" + sheetName + "]", myConnection);
The problem here is that the current code is not getting the worksheet names. Therefore, we cannot “select” the worksheet from the workbook then fill the adapter with the worksheet.
The other issue is setting the DataGridView’s DataSource to spreadSheetData… when you get the worksheet(s) from an Excel “Workbook”, you must assume there will be more than one sheet. Therefore a DataSet will work as a container to hold all the worksheets in the workbook. Each DataTable in the DataSet would be a single worksheet and it can be surmised that the DataGridView can only display ONE (1) of these tables at a time. Given this, below are the changes described along with an added button to display the “Next” worksheet in the DataGridView since there may be more than one worksheet in the workbook. Hope this makes sense.
int sheetIndex = 0;
DataSet ds = new DataSet();
public Form1() {
InitializeComponent();
}
private void btnImport_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) {
var frmDialog = new System.Windows.Forms.OpenFileDialog();
if (frmDialog.ShowDialog() == System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult.OK) {
String constr = String.Format(#"Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source={0};Extended Properties=""Excel 12.0 Xml;HDR=YES""", frmDialog.FileName);
OleDbConnection myConnection = new OleDbConnection(constr);
myConnection.Open();
DataTable spreadSheetData = myConnection.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
string sheetName = "";
DataTable dt;
OleDbCommand onlineConnection;
OleDbDataAdapter theDataAdapter;
// fill the "DataSet" each table in the set is a worksheet in the Excel file
foreach (DataRow dr in spreadSheetData.Rows) {
sheetName = dr["TABLE_NAME"].ToString();
sheetName = sheetName.Replace("'", "");
if (sheetName.EndsWith("$")) {
onlineConnection = new OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM [" + sheetName + "]", myConnection);
theDataAdapter = new OleDbDataAdapter(onlineConnection);
dt = new DataTable();
dt.TableName = sheetName;
theDataAdapter.Fill(dt);
ds.Tables.Add(dt);
}
}
myConnection.Close();
scheduleGridView.DataSource = ds.Tables[0];
setLabel();
}
}
private void setLabel() {
label1.Text = "Showing worksheet " + sheetIndex + " Named: " + ds.Tables[sheetIndex].TableName + " out of a total of " + ds.Tables.Count + " worksheets";
}
private void btnNextSheet_Click(object sender, EventArgs e) {
if (sheetIndex == ds.Tables.Count - 1)
sheetIndex = 0;
else
sheetIndex++;
scheduleGridView.DataSource = ds.Tables[sheetIndex];
setLabel();
}
I solved it. Well there was a workaround. I used the Excel Data Reader found in this thread: How to Convert DataSet to DataTable
Which led me to https://github.com/ExcelDataReader/ExcelDataReader
^ The readme was fantastic, just went to solution explorer, right click on references, manage NuGet Packages, select browse in the new box, enter ExcelDataReader, then in the .cs file be sure to include, "using Excel;" at the top, the code mentioned in the first link was essentially enough, but here's my exact code for those wondering.
var frmDialog = new System.Windows.Forms.OpenFileDialog();
if (frmDialog.ShowDialog() == System.Windows.Forms.DialogResult.OK)
{
/*string strFileName = frmDialog.FileName;
//System.IO.FileInfo spreadSheetFile = new System.IO.FileInfo(strFileName);
System.IO.StreamReader reader = new System.IO.StreamReader(strFileName);
*/
string strFileName = frmDialog.FileName;
FileStream stream = File.Open(strFileName, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
//1. Reading from a binary Excel file ('97-2003 format; *.xls)
IExcelDataReader excelReader = ExcelReaderFactory.CreateBinaryReader(stream);
//...
//2. Reading from a OpenXml Excel file (2007 format; *.xlsx)
//IExcelDataReader excelReader = ExcelReaderFactory.CreateOpenXmlReader(stream);
//...
//3. DataSet - The result of each spreadsheet will be created in the result.Tables
//DataSet result = excelReader.AsDataSet();
//...
//4. DataSet - Create column names from first row
excelReader.IsFirstRowAsColumnNames = true;
DataSet result = excelReader.AsDataSet();
DataTable data = result.Tables[0];
//5. Data Reader methods
while (excelReader.Read())
{
//excelReader.GetInt32(0);
}
scheduleGridView.DataSource = data;
excelReader.Close();
I am trying to read an excel sheet using this code
Dictionary<string, DataTable> tables = new Dictionary<string, DataTable>();//Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0
string sConnection = string.Format("Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source={0};Extended Properties='Excel 12.0;HDR=yes'", filePath);
OleDbConnection oleExcelConnection = new OleDbConnection(sConnection);
foreach(string sheet in Sheets)
{
DataTable dt = GetDataTable("SELECT * from [" + sheet + "$]", sConnection);
tables.Add(sheet, dt);
}
After I run it got this exception The 'Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0' provider is not registered on the local machine.
and I downloaded the component from here 'https://www.microsoft.com/en-us/download/confirmation.aspx?id=23734'
and worked correctly but when I deploy it it doesn't work
anyone can help ?
Please use execlDatareader for nugget package and use this code .Please change path to user file location.
execldatareader work everywhere but ole db must be installed on machine if u goes live with ole db can give u error.
string path1 = Path.Combine(HttpContext.Server.MapPath("~/App_Data/" + sessionManagement.GetUserId()), Path.GetFileName(model.FileName));
FileStream stream = System.IO.File.Open(path1, FileMode.Open, FileAccess.Read);
IExcelDataReader reader = null;
DataSet result = new DataSet();
try
{
if (path1.EndsWith(".xls"))
{
reader = ExcelReaderFactory.CreateBinaryReader(stream);
reader.IsFirstRowAsColumnNames = true;
}
if (path1.EndsWith(".xlsx"))
{
reader = ExcelReaderFactory.CreateOpenXmlReader(stream);
reader.IsFirstRowAsColumnNames = true;
}
result = reader.AsDataSet();
reader.Close();
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
Dispose();
}
DataTable dt = result.Tables[0];
Your MS ACE driver version (x86 / x64) must match targeted platform of your VS solution. Click on Project menu>Properties. Select "Build" tab. On your screen, locate a.combobox placed immediate right of label [Platform target:].change value of combobox from "Any CPU" to x86 or x64 whichever version you have and you will get rid of that error.
I am using a function in order to open an .xls file with multiple worksheets and copy the entire content into a .csv file.
Everything works just fine on my local machine: no exceptions, no errors etc.
But when I am running it on windows server 2012R I am getting an exception when the connection is opened.
Here is the code where I am trying to open an OleDB connection and then query through the file:
static void ConvertExcelToCsv(string excelFilePath, string csvOutputFile, int worksheetNumber)
{
// connection string
var cnnStr = String.Format("Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source=" + excelFilePath + ";Extended Properties=\"Excel 8.0;HDR=no;Format=xls\"");
var cnn = new OleDbConnection(cnnStr);
// get schema, then data
var dt = new DataTable();
try
{
cnn.Open();
var schemaTable = cnn.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
if (schemaTable.Rows.Count < worksheetNumber) throw new ArgumentException("The worksheet number provided cannot be found in the spreadsheet");
string worksheet = schemaTable.Rows[worksheetNumber - 1]["table_name"].ToString().Replace("'", "");
string sql = String.Format("select * from [{0}]", worksheet);
var da = new OleDbDataAdapter(sql, cnn);
da.Fill(dt);
....
The excelFilePath is my source excel file (.xls) and csvOutputFile is the file were the content is going to be passed to.
Does anyone has any ideas why I am getting this exception??
Here's my situation. I'm designing a program that takes Excel files (which may be in csv, xls, or xlsx format) from a remote network drive, processes the data, then outputs and stores the results of that process. The program provides a listbox of filenames that are obtained from the remote network drive folder using the method detailed in the accepted answer here. Once the user selects a filename from the listbox, I want the program to find the file and obtain the information from it to do the data processing. I have tried using this method to read the data from the Excel file while in a threaded security context, but that method just fails without giving any kind of error. It seems to not terminate. Am I going about this the wrong way?
Edit - (Final Notes: I have taken out the OleDbDataAdapter and replaced it with EPPlus handling.)
I was able to scrub sensitive data from the code, so here it is:
protected void GetFile(object principalObj)
{
if (principalObj == null)
{
throw new ArgumentNullException("principalObj");
}
IPrincipal principal = (IPrincipal)principalObj;
Thread.CurrentPrincipal = principal;
WindowsIdentity identity = principal.Identity as WindowsIdentity;
WindowsImpersonationContext impersonationContext = null;
if (identity != null)
{
impersonationContext = identity.Impersonate();
}
try
{
string fileName = string.Format("{0}\\" + Files.SelectedValue, #"RemoteDirectoryHere");
string connectionString = string.Format("Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.14.0; data source={0}; Extended Properties=Excel 14.0;", fileName);
OleDbDataAdapter adapter = new OleDbDataAdapter("SELECT * FROM Sheet1", connectionString);
DataSet ds = new DataSet();
adapter.Fill(ds, "Sheet1");
dataTable = ds.Tables["Sheet1"];
}
finally
{
if (impersonationContext != null)
{
impersonationContext.Undo();
}
}
}
Additional Edit
Now xlsx files have been added to the mix.
Third Party
Third party solutions are not acceptable in this case (unless they allow unrestricted commercial use).
Attempts - (Final Notes: Ultimately I had to abandon OleDb connections.)
I have tried all of the different connection strings offered, and I have tried them with just one file type at a time. None of the connection strings worked with any of the file types.
Permissions
The User does have access to the file and its directory.
Your connection string might be the issue here. As far as I know, there isn't 1 that can read all xls, csv, and xlsx. I think you're using the XLSX connection string.
When I read xls, i use the following connection string:
#"Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" + sFilePath + ";Extended Properties='Excel 8.0;HDR=YES;IMEX=1;'"
Having said that, I recommend using a 3rd party file reader/parser to read XLS and CSV since, from my experience, OleDbDataAdapter is wonky depending on the types of data that's being read (and how mixed they are within each column).
For XLS, try NPOI https://code.google.com/p/npoi/
For CSV, try http://www.codeproject.com/Articles/9258/A-Fast-CSV-Reader
For XLSX, try EPPlus http://epplus.codeplex.com/
I've had great success with the above libraries.
Is it really important that you use an OleDb interface for this? I've always done it with Microsoft.Office.Excel.Interop, to wit:
using System;
using Microsoft.Office.Interop.Excel;
namespace StackOverflowExample
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var app = new Application();
var wkbk = app.Workbooks.Open(#"c:\data\foo.xls") as Workbook;
var wksht = wkbk.Sheets[1] as Worksheet; // not zero-based!
for (int row = 1; row <= 100; row++) // not zero-based!
{
Console.WriteLine("This is row #" + row.ToString());
for (int col = 1; col <= 100; col++)
{
Console.WriteLine("This is col #" + col.ToString());
var cell = wksht.Cells[row][col] as Range;
if (cell != null)
{
object val = cell.Value;
if (val != null)
{
Console.WriteLine("The value of the cell is " + val.ToString());
}
}
}
}
}
}
}
As you will be dealing with xlsx extension, you should rather opt for the new connection string.
public static string getConnectionString(string fileName, bool HDRValue, bool WriteExcel)
{
string hdrValue = HDRValue ? "YES" : "NO";
string writeExcel = WriteExcel ? string.Empty : "IMEX=1";
return "Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;" + "Data Source=" + fileName + ";" + "Extended Properties=\"Excel 12.0 xml;HDR=" + hdrValue + ";" + writeExcel + "\"";
}
Above is the code for getting the connection string. First argument expects the actual path for file location. Second argument will decide whether to consider first row values as column headers or not. Third argument helps decide whether you want to open the connection to create and write the data or simply read the data. To read the data set it to "FALSE"
public static ReadData(string filePath, string sheetName, List<string> fieldsToRead, int startPoint, int endPoint)
{
DataTable dt = new DataTable();
try
{
string ConnectionString = ProcessFile.getConnectionString(filePath, false, false);
using (OleDbConnection cn = new OleDbConnection(ConnectionString))
{
cn.Open();
DataTable dbSchema = cn.GetOleDbSchemaTable(OleDbSchemaGuid.Tables, null);
if (dbSchema == null || dbSchema.Rows.Count < 1)
{
throw new Exception("Error: Could not determine the name of the first worksheet.");
}
StringBuilder sb = new StringBuilder();
sb.Append("SELECT *");
sb.Append(" FROM [" + sheetName + fieldsToRead[0].ToUpper() + startPoint + ":" + fieldsToRead[1].ToUpper() + endPoint + "] ");
OleDbDataAdapter da = new OleDbDataAdapter(sb.ToString(), cn);
dt = new DataTable(sheetName);
da.Fill(dt);
if (dt.Rows.Count > 0)
{
foreach (DataRow row in dt.Rows)
{
string i = row[0].ToString();
}
}
cn.Dispose();
return fileDatas;
}
}
catch (Exception)
{
}
}
This is for reading 2007 Excel into dataset
DataSet ds = new DataSet();
try
{
string myConnStr = "";
myConnStr = "Provider=Microsoft.ACE.OLEDB.12.0;Data Source=MyDataSource;Extended Properties=\"Excel 12.0;HDR=YES\"";
OleDbConnection myConn = new OleDbConnection(myConnStr);
OleDbCommand cmd = new OleDbCommand("select * from [Sheet1$] ", myConn);
OleDbDataAdapter adapter = new OleDbDataAdapter();
adapter.SelectCommand = cmd;
myConn.Open();
adapter.Fill(ds);
myConn.Close();
}
catch
{ }
return ds;
I am trying to import a .csv file into my database. I am able to import an excel worksheet into my database, however due to different file format as .csv as from .xls, I need to make an import function specially for .csv.
Below is my code:
protected void Button1_Click(object sender, EventArgs e)
{
if (FileUpload1.HasFile)
{
// Get the name of the Excel spreadsheet to upload.
string strFileName = Server.HtmlEncode(FileUpload1.FileName);
// Get the extension of the Excel spreadsheet.
string strExtension = Path.GetExtension(strFileName);
// Validate the file extension.
if (strExtension != ".xls" && strExtension != ".xlsx" && strExtension != ".csv" && strExtension != ".csv")
{
Response.Write("<script>alert('Failed to import DEM Conflicting Role Datasheet. Cause: Invalid Excel file.');</script>");
return;
}
// Generate the file name to save.
string strUploadFileName = #"C:\Documents and Settings\rhlim\My Documents\Visual Studio 2005\WebSites\SoD\UploadFiles\" + DateTime.Now.ToString("yyyyMMddHHmmss") + strExtension;
// Save the Excel spreadsheet on server.
FileUpload1.SaveAs(strUploadFileName);
// Create Connection to Excel Workbook
string connStr = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" + strUploadFileName + ";Extended Properties=Text;";
using (OleDbConnection ExcelConnection = new OleDbConnection(connStr)){
OleDbCommand ExcelCommand = new OleDbCommand("SELECT [columns] FROM +userrolelist", ExcelConnection);
OleDbDataAdapter ExcelAdapter = new OleDbDataAdapter(ExcelCommand);
ExcelConnection.Open();
using (DbDataReader dr = ExcelCommand.ExecuteReader())
{
// SQL Server Connection String
string sqlConnectionString = "Data Source=<IP>;Initial Catalog=<DB>;User ID=<userid>;Password=<password>";
// Bulk Copy to SQL Server
using (SqlBulkCopy bulkCopy =
new SqlBulkCopy(sqlConnectionString))
{
bulkCopy.DestinationTableName = "DEMUserRoles";
bulkCopy.WriteToServer(dr);
Response.Write("<script>alert('DEM User Data imported');</script>");
}
}
}
}
else Response.Write("<script>alert('Failed to import DEM User Roles Data. Cause: No file found.');</script>");
}
The file has been successfully saved, but the error says that the path for the file is not valid, even though the file has been successfully saved as .csv, therefore I am not able to continue with the process of importing the data into my database.
Below are the screenshots of my error:
In conclusion I am having the error that the file path which the csv file is saved is not valid, although the csv file is successfully saved. Need some help from experienced. Thank You
If you're reading a CSV file, your connection string should specify the directory containing your CSV file.
string connStr = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" +
Path.GetDirectoryName(strUploadFileName);
You then use the filename in your SELECT statement:
"SELECT * FROM [" + Path.GetFileName(strUploadFileName) + "]"
I think you have this problem because you use "/" instead of "\"
Try to modify the path C:\.....
You need to use the backward slashes(\) on the file path.
string strUploadFileName = #"C:\Documents and Settings\rhlim\My Documents\Visual Studio 2005\WebSites\SoD\UploadFiles\" + DateTime.Now.ToString("yyyyMMddHHmmss") + strExtension;
EDIT 1: I believe FileUpload1.SaveAs converts the / to \ internally to identify the correct location.
EDIT 2: Its the problem with your connectionstring, even though you are using .csv format, you need to set Excel 8.0 or Excel 12.0 Xml as the Extended Properties
Here is the sample:
string connStr = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" + strUploadFileName + ";Extended Properties=Excel 12.0 Xml;";
For other types, check the code of OLEDB section of my article.
To avoid the connection open you can use like
// Read the CSV file name & file path
// I am usisg here Kendo UI Uploader
string path = "";
string filenamee = "";
if (files != null)
{
foreach (var file in files)
{
var fileName = Path.GetFileName(file.FileName);
path = Path.GetFullPath(file.FileName);
filenamee = fileName;
}
// Read the CSV file data
StreamReader sr = new StreamReader(path);
string line = sr.ReadLine();
string[] value = line.Split(',');
DataTable dt = new DataTable();
DataRow row;
foreach (string dc in value)
{
dt.Columns.Add(new DataColumn(dc));
}
while (!sr.EndOfStream)
{
value = sr.ReadLine().Split(',');
if (value.Length == dt.Columns.Count)
{
row = dt.NewRow();
row.ItemArray = value;
dt.Rows.Add(row);
}
}
For more help you can also See This Link