Friday 17 February 2012

SPList.GetItems Method (SPQuery)

using System;
using Microsoft.SharePoint;

namespace Test
{
class ConsoleApp
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
using (SPSite site = new SPSite("http://localhost"))
{
using (SPWeb web = site.OpenWeb())
{
// Build a query.
SPQuery query = new SPQuery();
query.Query = string.Concat(
"<Where><Eq>",
"<FieldRef Name='Status'/>",
"<Value Type='CHOICE'>Not Started</Value>",
"</Eq></Where>",
"<OrderBy>",
"<FieldRef Name='DueDate' Ascending='TRUE' />",
"<FieldRef Name=’Priority’ Ascending='TRUE' />",
"</OrderBy>");

query.ViewFields = string.Concat(
"<FieldRef Name='AssignedTo' />",
"<FieldRef Name='LinkTitle' />",
"<FieldRef Name='DueDate' />",
"<FieldRef Name='Priority' />");

query.ViewFieldsOnly = true; // Fetch only the data that we need.

// Get data from a list.
string listUrl = web.ServerRelativeUrl + "/lists/tasks";
SPList list = web.GetList(listUrl);
SPListItemCollection items = list.GetItems(query);

// Print a report header.
Console.WriteLine("{0,-25} {1,-20} {2,-25} {3}",
"Assigned To", "Task", "Due Date", "Priority");

// Print the details.
foreach (SPListItem item in items)
{
Console.WriteLine("{0,-25} {1,-20} {2,-25} {3}",
item["AssignedTo"], item["LinkTitle"], item["DueDate"], item["Priority"]);
}
}
}
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}

No comments:

Post a Comment