About the author
So, the Movies CMS now looks like this. (To see a better view, click on it, or open it in another window).
The list of movies above are generated dynamically from the database.
The listings below are the letters from A to Z, followed by a “?”. The question mark is supposed to symbolize all movies that doesn't begin with A to Z, and lists those out.
So, I was using a DataSet in combination with a DataView to filter, like so:
daMovies.Fill(dsMovies, “Movies”);dvMovies.RowFilter = FilterExpression;
where FilterExpression coerces the DataView, dvMovies to produce an interesting listings of movies.
FilterExpression reads like so: “Title LIKE 'A%'” when the letter “A” is selected, or “Title LIKE 'B%'” when the letter “B” is selected.
So, when “?” is selected, my initial RowFilter reads “Title LIKE '[^A-Z]%'”. What this expression means is that: Gimme all the movie titles that does not begin with the letter A..Z. Unfortunately, that didn't work. I was under the impression that RowFilter simply passes the FilterExpression on to the database backend, alas, that wasn't so. If that were the case, that expression would have worked, and I wouldn't be writing this entry now.
It appears that the FilterExpression is actually an interface implemented by other classes. For details, see “How to generate an SQL filter clause using C#”.
For now, the FilterExpression for “?” is left as blank, as I think out how to solve this interesting issue.
Learn why the map is cool in Go!
A method to design records so that they're allocated on a specific byte boundary, such as 16 bytes, 512 bytes, 4096 bytes, etc.
Learn the command line used to compile System.pas in Delphi
How to free more space on your home drive by redirecting the location for SDKs in RAD Studio