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Your Role in Working with a Record View

The following table shows what you typically must do to work with a record view and what the framework does for you.

Working with a Record View: You and the Framework

You

The framework

Use the Visual C++ Dialog editor to design the form.

Creates a dialog template resource with controls.

Use the MFC Application Wizard to create classes derived from CRecordView and CRecordset or from CDaoRecordView and CDaoRecordset.

Writes the classes for you.

Map record view controls to recordset field data members.

Provides DDX between the controls and the recordset fields.

 

Provides default command handlers for Move First, Move Last, Move Next, and Move Previous commands from menus or toolbar buttons.

 

Updates changes to the data source.

[Optional] Write code to fill list boxes or combo boxes or other controls with data from a second recordset.

 

[Optional] Write code for any special validations.

 

[Optional] Write code to add or delete records.

 

Form-based programming is only one approach to working with a database. For information about applications using some other user interface, or no user interface, see MFC: Using Database Classes with Documents and Views and MFC: Using Database Classes Without Documents and Views. For alternative approaches to displaying database records, see classes CListView and CTreeView.

See Also

Concepts

Record Views

ODBC Driver List