I'm trying to figure out how to get the currently opened document on Lotus Notes through C#, but I cannot. Even though I researched half a day on Google, I couldn't find anything useful.
With my code I get the view I want, the database I want, etc, but I just would like to get the opened document. I tried something like IsUIDocOpen, but none of the full collection contains it as true.
Does someone know if there is any different between an opened document and a non-opened document trough Domino API? My workaround is to get the subject of the email and the size of the email and compare each one and when it matches get the Entry ID and then get the information I need - but that takes too long, especially when the inbox is big.
Any suggestions?
Here is my code:
NotesSession session = new NotesSession();
session.Initialize(sPassword);
notedb = session.GetDatabase(server, filename, false);
if (notedb.IsOpen)
{
mailView = notedb.GetView("$Inbox");
mailDoc = mailView.GetLastDocument();
//mailDoc = mailView.GetDocumentByKey();
try
{
while (mailDoc != null)
{
NotesItem item = mailDoc.GetFirstItem("From");
if (item != null)
{
MessageBox.Show("From = " + item.Text);
}
}
}
}
Solution: should be something like: mailDoc = mailView.GetCurrentDocument(); // But obviously this method does not exist :D
=====================================================================================
Solution code:
Type NotesUIWorkspaceType = Type.GetTypeFromProgID("Notes.NotesUIWorkspace", true);
object workspace = Activator.CreateInstance(NotesUIWorkspaceType);
object uiDoc = NotesUIWorkspaceType.InvokeMember("CurrentDocument", BindingFlags.GetProperty, null, workspace, null);
Type NotesUIDocument = uiDoc.GetType();
object Subject = NotesUIDocument.InvokeMember("FieldGetText", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, uiDoc, new Object[] { "Subject" });
string subject = "test";
NotesUIDocument.InvokeMember("FieldSetText", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, uiDoc, new Object[] { "Subject", subject });
object Body = NotesUIDocument.InvokeMember("FieldGetText", BindingFlags.InvokeMethod, null, uiDoc, new Object[] { "Body" });
What you actually need is the Notes OLE classes.
The C# Interop classes are based on the Notes COM classes. The COM classes only have access to the "back end". I.e., the root object is Lotus.NotesSession, and all the classes work against data stored in .NSF files. They have no access to anything in the Notes UI.
The Notes OLE classes have access to both the "back end", with the root object Notes.NotesSession, and the "front end" with the root object Notes.NotesUIWorkspace. As you can tell by the name of that class, it's the front end classes that give you access to elements of the Notes client UI.
Note the subtle difference: the prefix for the OLE classes is "Notes.", instead of the prefix "Lotus." for the COM classes.
In old-style VB late binding, the OLE classes are instantiated this way:
CreateObject("Notes.NotesUIWorkspace")
I'm not sure how that translates into C#.
Anyhow, once you have the NotesUIWorkspace object, the currently opened document is available with the NotesUIWorkspace.CurrentDocument method.
IF you are using the Interop Classes you need to use NotesUIView.CurrentView.Documents to get what you want... see here.
You'll need to get the NotesUIWorkspace first, then use the CurrentDocument property
NotesUIWorkspace workspace = new NotesUIWorkspace();
NotesUIDocument uidoc = workspace.CurrentDocument();
Related
At the moment I'm working with Word.dotx files that hold several bookmarks which are being altered by a c# program.
For a Rebranding project I need to add several new bookmark fields and my predecessor code does reference to the Text Form Field Legacy Control inside Office Word 2010.
I create a new Text Form Field with Field Settings Bookmark pointed to TestBookmark1. I'm already aware of a certain bug that the bookmarkname of a text form field can contain max 20 chars.
When I run the testcode, the existing bookmarks are replaced perfectly while it crashes on the new bookmarks. The exception I receive here is "The range cannot be deleted"
The code that is used for replacing the bookmark goes as follows:
public void ReplaceBookmark(string bookmarkName, string text)
{
try
{
var bookmarks = GetProperty("Bookmarks", _wordDoc); //worddoc is the Word.Document equivalent in late binding
var exists = InvokeMember("Exists",
bookmarks,
new object[]
{
bookmarkName
}) != null && (bool)InvokeMember("Exists",
bookmarks,
new object[]
{
bookmarkName
});
if (!exists)
return;
var bookmark = InvokeMember("Item",
bookmarks,
new object[]
{
bookmarkName
});
var range = GetProperty("Range", bookmark);
SetProperty("Text", range, text);
InvokeMember("Add",
bookmarks,
new[]
{
bookmarkName, range
});
}
catch
{
CloseWord(false);
throw;
}
}
The exception get's thrown at SetProperty("Text", range, text);
private static void SetProperty(string propertyName, object instance, object value)
{
if (instance == null)
return;
var type = instance.GetType();
type.InvokeMember(propertyName,
BindingFlags.SetProperty,
null,
instance,
new[]
{
value
});
}
When going deeper here it falls on the type.InvokeMember function.
I already saw a likewise solution found Here, But this example uses the Early binding principle that I for company reasons cannot use.
This leaves me with the following questions:
Am i adding the bookmarks incorrectly, or am i simply forgetting something?
Why do i get the "Range cannot be Deleted Exception"?
When i catch this specific error, is there another way to replace the bookmark?
Thanks in advance
I found it, probably another Office scam...
when adding a new Text Form Field you have the option to add the properties. In the Field Settings you can set the bookmark.
This however doesn't complete the bookmark thingy.
After setting the Text Form Field properties you still need to go to
Insert Tab => Tools Group => Bookmark => Select the correct bookmark (standard correctly highlighted) and press Add.
It's and sounds stupid, but I clearly didn't do the last steps.
greets
I'll start by asking am I right in thinking that in the image below:
the 'TABLE=CLOASEUCDBA.T_BASIC_POLICY' is not part of the connection string? in fact it is the source table name?
I'm looking to alter this to another linked table on the same database. The connection string should there be the same and the name that appears in ACCESS should be the same. The only difference should be under the hood it is actually referencing another table and of course if you open the table it will contain different fields and data.
my code for far to do this is:
var dbe = new DBEngine();
Database db = dbe.OpenDatabase(#"C:\Users\xxxx\Documents\Test.accdb");
foreach (TableDef tbd in db.TableDefs)
{
if (tbd.Name.Contains("CLOASEUCDBA_T_BASIC_POLICY"))
{
tbd.SourceTableName = "CLOASEUCDBA_T_BILLING_INFORMATION";
}
}
db.Close();
However I'm getting a big fat COMException "Cannot set this property once the object is part of a collection.". I'm not sure exactly why and all the examples I can find online are all written in VB/VBA and I only have very very limited exposure to this. Any help is appreciated.
EDIT:
I have tried to go a different route with no futher success using the code:
if (tbd.Name.Contains("CLOASEUCDBA_T_BASIC_POLICY"))
{
var newtable = db.CreateTableDef("this is a new table");
newtable.Name = "new table";
newtable.Connect = tbd.Connect;
newtable.SourceTableName = "CLOASEUCDBA_T_BILLING_INFORMATION";
db.TableDefs.Append(newtable);
//tbd.SourceTableName = "CLOASEUCDBA_T_BILLING_INFORMATION";
}
In this case I get the error "ODBC--call failed."
Since we're not allowed to change the SourceTableName of a TableDef object that already exists in the TableDefs collection we need to create a new TableDef object, .Delete the old one, and then .Append the new one:
// This code requires the following COM reference in your project:
//
// Microsoft Office 14.0 Access Database Engine Object Library
//
// and the declaration
//
// using Microsoft.Office.Interop.Access.Dao;
//
// at the top of the class file
string tableDefName = "CLOASEUCDBA_T_BASIC_POLICY";
var dbe = new DBEngine();
Database db = dbe.OpenDatabase(#"C:\Users\xxxx\Documents\Test.accdb");
var tbdOld = db.TableDefs[tableDefName];
var tbdNew = db.CreateTableDef(tableDefName);
tbdNew.Connect = tbdOld.Connect;
tbdNew.SourceTableName = "CLOASEUCDBA_T_BILLING_INFORMATION";
db.TableDefs.Delete(tableDefName); // remove the old TableDef ...
db.TableDefs.Append(tbdNew); // ... and append the new one
db.Close();
I'm implementing a plugin (POST Quote Create, Synchronous, Sandbox) to make it so that Notes are copied to the new record when a quote is revised.
My plugin boils down to this (snippet):
var serviceFactory = (IOrganizationServiceFactory)serviceProvider.GetService(typeof(IOrganizationServiceFactory));
var Service = serviceFactory.CreateOrganizationService(context.UserId);
var notesQuery = new QueryExpression("annotation");
notesQuery.ColumnSet = new ColumnSet(true);
notesQuery.Criteria = new FilterExpression
{
FilterOperator = LogicalOperator.And,
Conditions =
{
new ConditionExpression("objecttypecode", ConditionOperator.Equal, "quote"),
new ConditionExpression("objectid", ConditionOperator.Equal, revisedQuoteId)
}
};
var notes = Service.RetrieveMultiple(notesQuery).Entities;
foreach (var n in notes)
{
var newNote = new Entity("annotation");
newNote.Attributes.Add("ownerid", n.GetAttributeValue<EntityReference>("ownerid"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("objectid", new EntityReference("quote", sourceEntity.Id));
newNote.Attributes.Add("objecttypecode", "quote");
newNote.Attributes.Add("subject", n.GetAttributeValue<string>("subject"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("notetext", n.GetAttributeValue<string>("notetext"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("isdocument", n.GetAttributeValue<bool>("isdocument"));
if (n.GetAttributeValue<bool>("isdocument"))
{
newNote.Attributes.Add("filesize", n.GetAttributeValue<int>("filesize"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("documentbody", n.GetAttributeValue<string>("documentbody"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("filename", n.GetAttributeValue<string>("filename"));
newNote.Attributes.Add("mimetype", n.GetAttributeValue<string>("mimetype"));
}
Service.Create(newNote);
}
Basically, I copy everything over, including an eventual attachment. Everything seems fine, the new revision shows fields, detail records and notes properly... everything but the attachment of the notes.
If I have a single note, with an attached test.txt which content is:
Test attachment
The OrganizationData service reads as follows:
<d:FileName>test.txt</d:FileName>
<d:FileSize m:type="Edm.Int32">39</d:FileSize>
<d:DocumentBody>H4sIAAAMaVMA/wtJLS5RSCwpSUzOyE3NK+HlAgCLmj1zEQAAAA==</d:DocumentBody>
Its "clone" has the correct subject and text, and also shows a test.txt attached which content is
‹ iS ÿI-.QH,)ILÎÈMÍ+áå ‹š=s
mimetype and filesize (while checking odata, I noticed that filesize is not actually correct!) appear to be correct (aka: the same as the original note I'm trying to copy), but OData seems to confirm something's off (it's different!):
<d:FileName>test.txt</d:FileName>
<d:FileSize m:type="Edm.Int32">60</d:FileSize
<d:DocumentBody>H4sIAED6aVMA/5Pv5mBg4MkMZvjP7amrF+iho+npc+6E71nth0+ZGLpn2RYLMjAwAABXqCwTJQAAAA==</d:DocumentBody>
The test.txt file was created from a command prompt (COPY CON test.txt, type, CTRL+Z).
I tried to change the file, and created a test.pdf through PDFCreator: AcroRead in turn whines and says the document is corrupted (so it seems like the issue is mimetype-agnostic).
I also tried re-implementing the same code through early binding (via the CRMSVCUTIL-generated classes) but it yields the exact same result (garbage instead of the attachment contents).
I attempted to hand-craft the documentbody like this:
// "VGVzdCBhdHRhY2htZW50" is Base64 for "Test attachment"
newNote.Attributes.Add("documentbody", "VGVzdCBhdHRhY2htZW50");
and the created file is correct.
I can't figure out what's going on: as far as I know, documentbody is supposed to be a Base64-encoded string which (again, as far as I know) shouldn't be any different when copied around. What am I missing ?
For reference, CRM is updated to UR13 but I repro'd it on a UR16 environment.
EDIT: Does NOT work (only for CRM 4)
Try this (not verified):
var notes = Service.RetrieveMultiple(notesQuery).Entities;
foreach (var newNote in notes)
{
newNote.annotationid = null;
newNote.Attributes.Add("objectid", new EntityReference("quote", sourceEntity.Id));
newNote.Attributes.Add("objecttypecode", "quote");
Service.Create(newNote);
}
Just saw this, in an article from MSDN:
Annotation setupAnnotation = new Annotation()
{
Subject = "Example Annotation",
FileName = "ExampleAnnotationAttachment.txt",
DocumentBody = Convert.ToBase64String(
new UnicodeEncoding().GetBytes("Sample Annotation Text")),
MimeType = "text/plain"
};
I see the document body is encoded according to the Unicode encoding. Maybe you should try to retrieve the encoding from the file and convert it to a string accordingly.
The only solution I could find was using:
mshtml.HTMLDocument htmldocu = new mshtml.HTMLDocument();
htmldocu .createDocumentFromUrl(url, "");
and I am not sure about the performance, it should be better than loading the html file in a WebBrowser and then grab the HtmlDocument from there. Anyhow, that code does not work on my machine. The application crashes when it tries to execute the second line.
Has anyone an approach to achieve this efficiently or any other way?
NOTE: Please understand that I need the HtmlDocument object for DOM processing. I do not need the html string.
Use the DownloadString method of the WebClient object. e.g.
WebClient client = new WebClient();
string reply = client.DownloadString("http://www.google.com");
In the above example, after executed, reply will contain the html markup of the endpoint http://www.google.com.
WebClient.DownloadString MSDN
In an attempt to answer your actual question from four years ago (at the time of me posting this answer), I'm providing a working solution. I wouldn't be surprised if you found another way to do this, either, so this is mostly for other people searching for a similar solution. Keep in mind, however, that this is considered
somewhat obsolete (the actual use of HtmlDocument)
not the best way to handle HTML DOM parsing (the preferred solution is to use HtmlAgilityPack or CsQuery or some other method using actual parsing and not regular expressions)
extremely hacky and therefore not the safest/most compatible way to do it
you really should not be doing what I'm about to show
Additionally, keep in mind that HtmlDocument is really just a wrapper for mshtml.HTMLDocument2, so it is technically slower than just using a COM wrapper directly, but I completely understand the use case simply for ease of coding.
If you're cool with all of the above, here's how to accomplish what you want.
public class HtmlDocumentFactory
{
private static Type htmlDocType = typeof(System.Windows.Forms.HtmlDocument);
private static Type htmlShimManagerType = null;
private static object htmlShimSingleton = null;
private static ConstructorInfo docCtor = null;
public static HtmlDocument Create()
{
if (htmlShimManagerType == null)
{
// get a type reference to HtmlShimManager
htmlShimManagerType = htmlDocType.Assembly.GetType(
"System.Windows.Forms.HtmlShimManager"
);
// locate the necessary private constructor for HtmlShimManager
var shimCtor = htmlShimManagerType.GetConstructor(
BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance, null, new Type[0], null
);
// create a new HtmlShimManager object and keep it for the rest of the
// assembly instance
htmlShimSingleton = shimCtor.Invoke(null);
}
if (docCtor == null)
{
// get the only constructor for HtmlDocument (which is marked as private)
docCtor = htmlDocType.GetConstructors(
BindingFlags.NonPublic | BindingFlags.Instance
)[0];
}
// create an instance of mshtml.HTMLDocument2 (in the form of
// IHTMLDocument2 using HTMLDocument2's class ID)
object htmlDoc2Inst = Activator.CreateInstance(Type.GetTypeFromCLSID(
new Guid("25336920-03F9-11CF-8FD0-00AA00686F13")
));
var argValues = new object[] { htmlShimSingleton, htmlDoc2Inst };
// create a new HtmlDocument without involving WebBrowser
return (HtmlDocument)docCtor.Invoke(argValues);
}
}
To use it:
var htmlDoc = HtmlDocumentFactory.Create();
htmlDoc.Write("<html><body><div>Hello, world!</body></div></html>");
Console.WriteLine(htmlDoc.Body.InnerText);
// output:
// Hello, world!
I have not tested this code directly -- I have translated it from an old Powershell script that needed the same functionality you're requesting. If it fails, let me know. The functionality is there but the code might need very minor tweaking to get working.
I am attempting to load document files into a document library in SharePoint using the CopyIntoItems method of the SharePoint Copy web service.
The code below executes and returns 0 (success). Also, the CopyResult[] array returns 1 value with a "Success" result. However, I cannot find the document anywhere in the library.
I have two questions:
Can anyone see anything wrong with my code or suggest changes?
Can anyone suggest how I could debug this on the server side. I don't have a tremendous amount of experience with SharePoint. If I can track what is going on through logging or some other method on the server side it may help me figure out what is going on.
Code Sample:
string[] destinationUrls = { Uri.EscapeDataString("https://someaddress.com/Reports/Temp") };
SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation i1 = new SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation { DisplayName = "Name", InternalName = "Name", Type = SPListTransferSpike1.SPCopyWebService.FieldType.Text, Value = "Test1Name" };
SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation i2 = new SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation { DisplayName = "Title", InternalName = "Title", Type = SPListTransferSpike1.SPCopyWebService.FieldType.Text, Value = "Test1Title" };
SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation[] info = { i1, i2 };
SPCopyWebService.CopyResult[] result;
byte[] data = File.ReadAllBytes("C:\\SomePath\\Test1Data.txt");
uint ret = SPCopyNew.CopyIntoItems("", destinationUrls, info, data, out result);
Edit that got things working:
I got my code working by adding "http://null" to the SourceUrl field. Nat's answer below would probably work for that reason. Here is the line I changed to get it working.
// Change
uint ret = SPCopyNew.CopyIntoItems("http://null", destinationUrls, info, data, out result);
I think the issue may be in trying to set the "Name" property using the webservice. I have had some fail doing that.
Given the "Name" is the name of the document, you may have some success with
string targetDocName = "Test1Name.txt";
string destinationUrl = Uri.EscapeDataString("https://someaddress.com/Reports/Temp/" + targetDocName);
string[] destinationUrls = { destinationUrl };
SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation i1 = new SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation { DisplayName = "Title", InternalName = "Title", Type = SPListTransferSpike1.SPCopyWebService.FieldType.Text, Value = "Test1Title" };
SPCopyWebService.FieldInformation[] info = { i1};
SPCopyWebService.CopyResult[] result;
byte[] data = File.ReadAllBytes("C:\\SomePath\\Test1Data.txt");
uint ret = SPCopyNew.CopyIntoItems(destinationUrl, destinationUrls, info, data, out result);
Note: I have used the "target" as the "source" property. Don't quite know why, but it does the trick.
I didn't understand very well what you're tying to do, but if you're trying to upload a file from a local directory into a sharepoint library, i would suggest you create a webclient and use uploadata:
Example (VB.NET):
dim webclient as Webclient
webClient.UploadData("http://srvasddress/library/filenameexample.doc", "PUT", filebytes)
Then you just have to check in the file using the lists web service, something like:
listService.CheckInFile("http://srvasddress/library/filenameexample.doc", "description", "1")
Hope it was of some help.
EDIT: Don't forget to set credentials for the web client, etc.
EDIT 2: Update metada fields using this:
listService.UpdateListItems("Name of the Library, batchquery)
You can find info on building batch query's in here: link
The sourceurl is used in Sharepoint. It is a link back to the "Source Document." When in your document library, hover over the item, to the right appears a down pointing triangle. Clicking on it, brings up a menu. Click on the "View Properties" Option. On this page you will see the following "This item is a copy of http://null ( Go To Source Item | Unlink )"
Because we are using the Copy function Sharepoint is keeping track of the "Source item" as part of the Document Management feature.