ANJCSC News
<% ' Declare our variables... always good practice! Dim cnnSimple ' ADO connection Dim rstSimple ' ADO recordset Dim strDBPath ' path to our Access database (*.mdb) file ' MapPath of virtual database file path to a physical path. ' If you want you could hard code a physical path here. strDBPath = Server.MapPath("cms/access_db/eblandacms.mdb") ' Create an ADO Connection to connect to the scratch database. ' We're using OLE DB but you could just as easily use ODBC or a DSN. Set cnnSimple = Server.CreateObject("ADODB.Connection") ' This line is for the Access sample database: cnnSimple.Open "Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=" & strDBPath & ";" ' We're actually using SQL Server so we use this line instead: 'cnnSimple.Open "Provider=SQLOLEDB;Data Source=10.2.1.214;" _ ' & "Initial Catalog=samples;User Id=samples;Password=password;" _ ' & "Connect Timeout=15;Network Library=dbmssocn;" ' Execute a query using the connection object. It automatically ' creates and returns a recordset which we store in our variable. Set rstSimple = cnnSimple.Execute("SELECT * FROM news ORDER BY date desc") ' Display a table of the data in the recordset. We loop through the ' recordset displaying the fields from the table and using MoveNext ' to increment to the next record. We stop when we reach EOF. %> <% Do While Not rstSimple.EOF %>

<% rstSimple.MoveNext Loop %>
<%= rstSimple.Fields("title").Value %>
Date: <%= rstSimple.Fields("date").Value %>
<%= rstSimple.Fields("article").Value %>




This application was custom hand-coded by Robert Blanda <% ' Close our recordset and connection and dispose of the objects rstSimple.Close Set rstSimple = Nothing cnnSimple.Close Set cnnSimple = Nothing ' That's all folks! %>