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Executables.Item[Object] Property

Definition

Gets an Executable object from the collection.

public:
 property Microsoft::SqlServer::Dts::Runtime::Executable ^ default[System::Object ^] { Microsoft::SqlServer::Dts::Runtime::Executable ^ get(System::Object ^ index); };
public Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime.Executable this[object index] { get; }
member this.Item(obj) : Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime.Executable
Default Public ReadOnly Property Item(index As Object) As Executable

Parameters

index
Object

The index of the Executable object to return.

Property Value

An Executable object from the collection.

Examples

The following example is a modification of the sample found in Remove. It removes the executable using the item syntax.

using System;  
using System.Collections.Generic;  
using System.Text;  
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime;  
using Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Tasks.BulkInsertTask;  

namespace Executables_API  
{  
        class Program  
        {  
                static void Main(string[] args)  
                {  
                    Executable exec = pkg.Executables.Add("STOCK:BulkInsertTask");  
                    TaskHost myTask = exec as TaskHost;  
                    BulkInsertTask myBI = myTask.InnerObject as BulkInsertTask;  
                    myBI.DebugMode = false;  
                    myBI.CheckConstraints = false;  
                    myBI.KeepIdentity = true;  

                    // Obtain the collection.  
                    Executables pgkExecs = pkg.Executables;  
                    // Show the number of executables in the collection.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The first package contains {0} executables", pgkExecs.Count);  

                    // It is a requirement to Remove the task from the  
                    // existing package before adding it to the new package.  
                    // Remove the exectuable using the Executables[x] item syntax.   
                    DtsContainer c = (DtsContainer)pkg.Executables[0];  
                    pkg.Executables.Remove(c);  

                    // Show the number of executables in the collection afterwards.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The first package now contains {0} executables", pgkExecs.Count);  

                    Package pkg2 = new Package();  
                    Executables p2Execs = pkg2.Executables;  
                    // Show the number of executables in the second collection.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The second package initially contains {0} executables", p2Execs.Count);  
                    // Join the task from pkg to pkg2.  
                    pkg2.Executables.Join(myTask);  
                    // Show the number of executables in the second collection after Join.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The second package now contains {0} executables", p2Execs.Count);  

        }  
    }  
}  
Imports System  
Imports System.Collections.Generic  
Imports System.Text  
Imports Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Runtime  
Imports Microsoft.SqlServer.Dts.Tasks.BulkInsertTask  

Namespace Executables_API  
        Class Program  
                Shared  Sub Main(ByVal args() As String)  
                    Dim exec As Executable =  pkg.Executables.Add("STOCK:BulkInsertTask")   
                    Dim myTask As TaskHost =  exec as TaskHost   
                    Dim myBI As BulkInsertTask =  myTask.InnerObject as BulkInsertTask   
                    myBI.DebugMode = False  
                    myBI.CheckConstraints = False  
                    myBI.KeepIdentity = True  

                    ' Obtain the collection.  
                    Dim pgkExecs As Executables =  pkg.Executables   
                    ' Show the number of executables in the collection.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The first package contains {0} executables", pgkExecs.Count)  

                    ' It is a requirement to Remove the task from the  
                    ' existing package before adding it to the new package.  
                    ' Remove the exectuable using the Executables[x] item syntax.   
                    Dim c As DtsContainer = CType(pkg.Executables(0), DtsContainer)  
                    pkg.Executables.Remove(c)  

                    ' Show the number of executables in the collection afterwards.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The first package now contains {0} executables", pgkExecs.Count)  

                    Dim pkg2 As Package =  New Package()   
                    Dim p2Execs As Executables =  pkg2.Executables   
                    ' Show the number of executables in the second collection.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The second package initially contains {0} executables", p2Execs.Count)  
                    ' Join the task from pkg to pkg2.  
                    pkg2.Executables.Join(myTask)  
                    ' Show the number of executables in the second collection after Join.  
                    Console.WriteLine("The second package now contains {0} executables", p2Execs.Count)  

                End Sub  
        End Class  
End Namespace  

Sample Output:

The first package contains 1 executables

The first package now contains 0 executables

The second package initially contains 0 executables

The second package now contains 1 executables

Remarks

If the call to the Contains method returns true, you can access the specified element in the collection by using the syntax Executables[index]. If the Contains returns false, this property throws an exception. In C#, this property is the indexer for the Executables class.

Applies to