Query and display excel data by using ASP.NET, ADO.NET, and Visual C# .NET

This article demonstrates how to query and display data from an Excel worksheet through an ASP.NET (.aspx) page by using Visual C# .NET.

Original product version:   ASP.NET
Original KB number:   306572

Create a sample Excel worksheet

  1. Start Microsoft Excel, and then create a new worksheet.

  2. Add the following information to the new worksheet to create an Excel database:

    Row number A B
    1 FirstName LastName
    2 Scott Bishop
    3 Katie Jordan

    Note

    Although the data starts with cell A1 in this example, you can add this data to any adjacent cells within the worksheet.

  3. Highlight the rows and columns where the data is.

  4. On the Insert menu, point to Name, and then click Define.

  5. In the Names in workbook text box, type myRange1, and then click OK.

  6. On the File menu, click Save. In the Save in list, select the Web server root (which is typically C:\InetPub\Wwwroot\). In the File name text box, type ExcelData.xls. Click OK.

  7. On the File menu, click Exit.

Create an ASP.NET sample by using Visual C# .NET

This code sample demonstrates how to query and display information in an Excel worksheet. The following code uses the worksheet that you created in the previous section.

  1. Open Microsoft Visual Studio .NET. The Visual Studio .NET Integrated Development Environment (IDE) is displayed.

  2. On the File menu, point to New, and then click Project.

  3. In the New Project dialog box, under Project Types, click Visual C# Projects. Under Templates, click ASP.NET Web Application.

  4. In the New Project dialog box, locate the Name and Location text boxes.

    Note

    • The Name text box is not available (it appears grayed out or dimmed). The Location text box contains the text (or similar) http://localhost/WebApplication1.
    • Replace the text in the Location text box with http://localhost/ExcelCSTest, and then click OK. A new project is created, which includes a Web Form named WebForm1.aspx.
  5. In the Visual Studio .NET IDE, locate the Solution Explorer window. If you can't find it, click Solution Explorer on the View menu.

  6. In Solution Explorer, right-click WebForm1.aspx, and then click View Designer to display the designer for the appearance of the page. The designer allows you to add controls and manipulate the appearance of the page.

  7. Locate the toolbox. Depending on your IDE Option settings, the toolbox can appear as a window or a button (which often appears on the left side of the IDE). If you can't find the toolbox, click Toolbox on the View menu.

    If the toolbox appears as a button, move the pointer over the button so that the contents of the toolbox are displayed.

  8. When the designer view of a Web Form is active, the toolbox is divided into sections, including the Web Forms, Components, HTML, and other sections. Click the Web Forms section.

  9. In the Web Forms section of the toolbox, click DataGrid, and then drag it onto the designer for WebForm1.

  10. Right-click WebForm1.aspx, and then click View Code to display the code-behind page source.

  11. Add the following statements to the top of the code-behind page, above the namespace section:

    using System.Data.OleDb;
    using System.Data;
    
  12. Highlight the following code, right-click the code, and then click Copy. In WebForm1.aspx.cs, paste the code into the Page_Load event:

    // Create connection string variable. Modify the "Data Source"
    // parameter as appropriate for your environment.
    String sConnectionString = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;" +
    "Data Source=" + Server.MapPath("../ExcelData.xls") + ";" +
    "Extended Properties=Excel 8.0;";
    
    // Create connection object by using the preceding connection string.
    OleDbConnection objConn = new OleDbConnection(sConnectionString);
    
    // Open connection with the database.
    objConn.Open();
    
    // The code to follow uses a SQL SELECT command to display the data from the worksheet.
    // Create new OleDbCommand to return data from worksheet.
    OleDbCommand objCmdSelect =new OleDbCommand("SELECT * FROM myRange1", objConn);
    
    // Create new OleDbDataAdapter that is used to build a DataSet
    // based on the preceding SQL SELECT statement.
    OleDbDataAdapter objAdapter1 = new OleDbDataAdapter();
    
    // Pass the Select command to the adapter.
    objAdapter1.SelectCommand = objCmdSelect;
    
    // Create new DataSet to hold information from the worksheet.
    DataSet objDataset1 = new DataSet();
    
    // Fill the DataSet with the information from the worksheet.
    objAdapter1.Fill(objDataset1, "XLData");
    
    // Bind data to DataGrid control.
    DataGrid1.DataSource = objDataset1.Tables[0].DefaultView;
    DataGrid1.DataBind();
    
    // Clean up objects.
    objConn.Close();
    
  13. On the File menu, click Save All to save the project files.

  14. On the Build menu, click Build to build the project. This step prepares the code in the code-behind page so that it can be executed.

  15. In Solution Explorer, right-click WebForm1.aspx, and then click View in Browser to run the code.

Additional code explanation

The code sample in this article uses the Microsoft Jet OLE DB Provider to access the Excel worksheet. This code uses the following connection string to connect to the worksheet:

// Create connection string variable. Modify the "Data Source"
// parameter as appropriate for your environment.
String sConnectionString = "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;" +
"Data Source=" + Server.MapPath("../ExcelData.xls") + ";" +
"Extended Properties=Excel 8.0;";

As the comments indicate, you must modify the path information for the specific Excel worksheet. In addition, you must also set the value of the Extended Properties parameter to properly connect to the file.

Note

The connection string uses the Server.MapPath function. This function takes a path that is relative to Microsoft Internet Information Services (IIS) to a file and returns a hard disk path to that file. For example, in the Create sample Excel worksheet section, you create ExcelData.xls in the Web root directory, which is typically located at C:\Inetpub\Wwwroot. This also creates a subfolder named ExcelCSTest within the Wwwroot folder and a file named WebForm1.aspx within the _ExcelCSTest_folder.

In this example, the file path on the hard disk is like C:\Inetpub\Wwwroot\ExcelCSTest. Wwwroot contains ExcelData.xls, ExcelCSTest contains WebForm1.aspx.

The IIS path to the files is like C:\Web Root\ExcelCSTest. And Web Root contains ExcelData.xls, ExcelCSTest contains WebForm1.aspx.

In this case, the relative path from the WebForm1.aspx page to the ExcelData.xls file is ../ExcelData.xls. The ../ characters inform IIS to go up one folder level. So the code Server.MapPath("../ExcelData.xls") returns the following string:

C:\Inetpub\Wwwroot\ExcelData.xls

You aren't required to use Server.MapPath. You can also hard code this information to a specific path, or you can use any method to supply the location of the Excel file on the hard disk.

References

For more information about using ADO.NET, see How To Populate a DataSet Object from a Database by Using Visual C# .NET

Note

The example companies, organizations, products, domain names, e-mail addresses, logos, people, places, and events depicted herein are fictitious. No association with any real company, organization, product, domain name, email address, logo, person, places, or events is intended or should be inferred.