Filtering rows

You can use WHERE and HAVING clauses and retrieval arguments in the SQL SELECT statement for the DataWindow object to limit the data that is retrieved from the database. This reduces retrieval time and space requirements at runtime.

However, you may want to further limit the data that displays in the DataWindow object. For example, you might want to:

Using filters

In the DataWindow painter, you can define filters to limit the rows that display at runtime. Filters can use most DataWindow expression functions or user-defined functions.

NoteFilters do not affect which rows are retrieved A filter operates against the retrieved data. It does not re-execute the SELECT statement.

Defining a filter

StepsTo define a filter:

  1. In the DataWindow painter, select Rows>Filter from the menu bar.

    The Specify Filter dialog box displays:

    Shown is the Specify Filter dialog box.
  2. In the Specify Filter dialog box, enter a boolean expression that PowerBuilder will test against each retrieved row.

    If the expression evaluates to true, the row is displayed. You can specify any valid expression in a filter. Filters can use any non-object-level PowerScript function, including user-defined functions. You can paste commonly used functions, names of columns, computed fields, retrieval arguments, and operators into the filter.

    For information about expressions for filters, see the DataWindow Reference.

  3. (Optional) Click Verify to make sure the expression is valid.

  4. Click OK.

    Only rows meeting the filter criteria are displayed in the Preview view.

Removing a filter

StepsTo remove a filter:

  1. Select Rows>Filter from the menu bar.

  2. Delete the filter expression from the Specify Filter dialog box, then click OK.

Examples of filters

Assume that a DataWindow object retrieves employee rows and three of the columns are Salary, Status, and Emp_Lname. Table 23-1 shows some examples of filters you might use.

Table 23-1: Sample filters

To display these rows

Use this filter

Employees with salaries over $50,000

Salary > 50000

Active employees

Status = 'A'

Active employees with salaries over $50,000

Salary > 50000 AND Status = 'A'

Employees whose last names begin with H

left(Emp_Lname, 1) = 'H'

Setting filters dynamically

You can use the SetFilter and Filter methods in a script to dynamically modify a filter that was set in the DataWindow painter. For information about SetFilter and Filter, see the online help.