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CeReadRecordPropsEx

This function reads properties from the current record.

A RAPI version of this function exists called CeReadRecordPropsEx (RAPI).

CEOID CeReadRecordPropsEx( 
  HANDLE hDbase, 
  DWORD dwFlags,
  LPWORD lpcPropID, 
  CEPROPID* rgPropID, 
  LPBYTE* lplpBuffer,
  LPDWORD lpcbBuffer, 
  HANDLE hHeap
);

Parameters

  • hDbase
    [in] Handle to an open database. The database must have been opened by a previous call to the CeOpenDatabaseEx2 function.
  • dwFlags
    [in] Read flag. The following table shows possible values for dwFlags.
    Value Description
    0 Indicates that there are no special instructions for handling the read process.
    CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC Indicates that the LocalAlloc function was used to allocate the buffer specified by the lplpBuffer parameter. The server can reallocate the buffer if it is not large enough to hold the requested properties.
  • lpcPropID
    [in] Pointer to the number of property identifiers in the array specified by the rgPropID parameter. If rgPropID is NULL, this parameter receives the number of properties retrieved.
  • rgPropID
    [in] Pointer to an array of property identifiers for the properties to be retrieved. If this parameter is NULL, CeReadRecordPropsEx retrieves all properties in the record.
  • lplpBuffer
    [out] Pointer to the address of a pointer to a buffer that receives the requested properties. If the dwFlags parameter includes the CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC flag, the buffer may be reallocated if necessary, even if the function fails. If the CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC flag is specified and lplpBuffer is NULL, the server allocates a buffer of the appropriate size in the caller's address space and returns a pointer to the buffer.
  • lpcbBuffer
    [out] Pointer to a variable that contains the size, in bytes, of the buffer specified by the lplpBuffer parameter. When CeReadRecordPropsEx returns, lpcbBuffer receives a value that indicates the actual size of the data copied to the buffer. If the buffer was too small to contain the data and CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC was not specified, this parameter can be used to calculate the amount of memory to allocate for the buffer.
  • hHeap
    [in] For Windows CE 2.10 and later, handle to a application-created heap to be used when reallocating memory. This parameter is only meaningful if the CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC flag is set.

Return Values

The object identifier of the record from which the function read indicates success. Zero indicates failure. To get extended error information, call GetLastError. The following table lists possible values for GetLastError.

Value Description
ERROR_INVALID_PARAMETER Indicates that a parameter was invalid.
ERROR_NO_DATA Indicates that none of the requested properties were found. The output buffer and the size are valid.
ERROR_INSUFFICIENT_BUFFER Indicates that the specified buffer was not large enough, and the reallocation failed if the CEDB_ALLOWREALLOC flag was specified. The lpcbBuffer parameter contains the required buffer size.
ERROR_KEY_DELETED Indicates that the record that was about to be read was deleted by another thread. If the current record was reached as a result of an autoseek, this error is not returned and the next record is returned.
ERROR_NO_MORE_ITEMS Indicates that the current seek pointer is at the end of the database.

Return Values

The CeReadRecordPropsEx function reads the specified set of properties from the current record. If the dwFlags parameter of CeOpenDatabaseEx2 was set to CEDB_AUTOINCREMENT, the function increments the seek pointer so that the next call reads the next record in the current sort order. If there was no active sort order when the database was opened, then the order in which records are returned is not predictable.

When rgPropID is set to NULL, CeReadRecordPropsEx does not return properties in any specific order. When you set rgPropID to NULL, you should use a loop to read the properties returned by CeReadRecordPropsEx and verify the PropID value of each property, rather than assume a specific order.

When rgPropID is non-NULL, the properties are returned in the order they are listed in rgPropID. If a requested property is not present in the record, the wFlags member of CEPROPVAL is set to CEDB_PROPNOTFOUND.

You should read all needed properties from the record in a single call. This is because the entire record is stored in a compressed format and each time a property is read it must be decompressed. All the properties are returned in a single marshaled structure, which consists of an array of CEPROPVAL structures. There is one CEPROPVAL structure for each property requested or, if rgPropID is NULL, there is one for each property found.

If a variable-sized property was requested, such as strings or Binary Large Objects (BLOBs) that are packed in at the end of the array, the pointers in the CEPROPVAL structures point into this marshaled structure. This means that the only memory that must be freed is the original pointer to the buffer passed in to the call. Even if the function fails, it may have allocated memory on the caller's behalf. You must free the pointer returned by this function if the pointer is not NULL.

Requirements

OS Versions: Windows CE 2.10 and later.
Header: Windbase.h.
Link Library: Coredll.lib.

See Also

CeOpenDatabaseEx2 | CeSeekDatabaseEx | LocalAlloc | CEPROPVAL

 Last updated on Friday, April 09, 2004

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