Connecting to Exchange or Outlook

Problem

You want to use ADO.NET to extract data from Microsoft Outlook or Microsoft Exchange.

Solution

Use the OLE DB Jet provider to access Exchange and Outlook data.

The sample code contains two event handlers:

Form.Load

Displays a form that allows the user to specify the mailbox name and mail profile to connect to.

Connect Button.Click

Creates and opens a connection to Outlook or Exchange data using the OLE DB .NET data provider. A DataAdapter is used to fill a table with the Subject and Content of each message in the Inbox . The default view of the table is bound to a data grid on the form.

The C# code is shown in Example 1-8.

Example 1-8. File: ConnectExchangeDataForm.cs

// Namespaces, variables, and constants
using System;
using System.Windows.Forms;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.OleDb;

// . . . 

private void ConnectExchangeDataForm_Load(object sender,
 System.EventArgs e)
{
 mailboxNameTextBox.Text = "Personal Folders";
 profileTextBox.Text = "Outlook";
}

private void connectButton_Click(object sender, System.EventArgs e)
{
 String sqlText = "SELECT Subject, Contents FROM Inbox";

 // Build the connection string.
 String connectionString="Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;" +
 "Outlook 9.0;" +
 "MAPILEVEL=" + mailboxNameTextBox.Text + ";" +
 "PROFILE=" + profileTextBox.Text + ";" +
 "TABLETYPE=0;" +
 "DATABASE=" + System.IO.Path.GetTempPath( );

 // Create the DataAdapter.
 OleDbDataAdapter da = new OleDbDataAdapter(sqlText, connectionString);

 // Create and fill the table.
 DataTable dt = new DataTable("Inbox");
 try
 {
 da.Fill(dt);
 dataGrid.DataSource = dt.DefaultView;
 }
 catch(Exception ex)
 {
 MessageBox.Show("ERROR: " + ex.Message);
 return;
 }
}

Discussion

The .NET data provider for OLE DB does not support OLE DB Version 2.5 interfaces including the Microsoft OLE DB Provider for Exchange. The Jet OLE DB provider can access an Outlook or Exchange store. An example of the connection string:

Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Outlook 9.0;MAPILEVEL=Personal Folders;
 PROFILE=Outlook;TABLETYPE=0;DATABASE=c:	emp;

The connection string attributes-and-value pairs are described in Table 1-1.

Table 1-1. Outlook or Exchange connection string attributes

Element

Description

Database name

DATABASE=path

With an Identifier of Outlook 9.0 , the path to store temporary system tables.

With an Identifier of Exchange 4.0 , the path and filename to a Microsoft Access database in which to store temporary system tables.

Identifier

Outlook 9.0 to connect to Outlook 2000 and later.

Exchange 4.0 to connect to Exchange 4.x and 5.x.

Password

PASSWORD=password

Outlook or Exchange password. This parameter is not required if your network logon password is passed to the Outlook or Exchange server. This parameter is optional.

Profile name

PROFILE=profile

The name of the Outlook or Exchange profile to use. If this not specified, the default profile is used.

Table path

MAPILEVEL=

is the exact mailbox name on the server, a personal folder, or public folder as it appears in the Outlook Folder list.

is the path to the folder immediately above the folder to access using the SQL statement. The folder path is required only when accessing folders below the top level of folders within the store; the pipe ( ) character is always required. When listing nested folders, separate each folder name with a backslash ( ).

Table type

TABLETYPE=0 for folders (default value).

TABLETYPE=1 for address books.

Connecting to Data

Retrieving and Managing Data

Searching and Analyzing Data

Adding and Modifying Data

Copying and Transferring Data

Maintaining Database Integrity

Binding Data to .NET User Interfaces

Working with XML

Optimizing .NET Data Access

Enumerating and Maintaining Database Objects

Appendix A. Converting from C# to VB Syntax



ADO. NET Cookbook
ADO.NET 3.5 Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596101406
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2002
Pages: 222
Authors: Bill Hamilton

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