
Introduction
That article present a way to build HTML pages in ISAPI
using OLE DB database access. The sample database is an Access database.
Functionality
When you open the page in a client browser (WriteLayout.dll in the URL), the default page is
opened:

Here are 2 links, WritePageDB2Web and WritePageDemo. Both links load the same HTML page.
The first link load the page using dynamic data from an access database and piece of data from HTML resource.
The second link load the page using a HTML string resource. The advantages are clear:
the entire HTML page will be fastest loaded because the only dynamic data will
be coming
from the Database using the CAdoDatabase and CAdoRecordset classes. Large HTML parts of the page
are hard coded in resource
strings and will be loaded only on the first call.
Developing the pieces of HTML code inside of Visual Studio project are very easy.
The HTML string resources from a C++ project will be linked exactly to the correspondent external files.
If you will work with Macromedia or InterDev on that's HTML's files, just recompile the C++ project
and the changes will be updated !
To link the external HTML files to HTML resources strings follow these steps:

Open the Resource tab of the project. Right click inside this tab and choose Import, like in picture.

After the previous step will see the Import Resource control dialog.
Choose an appropriate directory for your project directory where you work on that HTML files. In
this example we
have the C++ project under the /MFC/WriteForm and the HTML hard coded files under /MFC/Web/HTML.

After this step we will obtain a new tag in our resources, called HTML.
Under that tag will see the new added html file with a resource ID such as IDR_HTML1. Right
click on IDR_HTML1,
click properties and change the ID to your custom name (like in picture). It is
very important to change the properties the FileName location and check the ExternalFile (see the picture).
In that way your resource inside the c project will be linked exactly to the
external file ("..\web\HTML\Form.html").
You now have the HTML file in your C++ project! To see it just double click
the imported resource

Double click the resource in the right panel to open the HTML file with syntax
coloring.
Right click on the right panel to obtain an option with browser preview of that resource
HTML file
Using the HTML resources in your project
How do you use these string resources into your Visual Studio project? Just use the
LoadLongResource private function:
BOOL CWriteLayoutExtension::LoadLongResource(CString& str, UINT nID)
{
HRSRC hRes;
HINSTANCE hInst = AfxGetResourceHandle();
BOOL bResult = FALSE;
hRes = FindResource(hInst, MAKEINTRESOURCE(nID), RT_HTML);
if (hRes == NULL)
ISAPITRACE1("Error: Resource %d could not be found\r\n", nID);
else
{
DWORD dwSize = SizeofResource(hInst, hRes);
if (dwSize == 0)
{ str.Empty();
bResult = TRUE;
}
else
{
LPTSTR pszStorage = str.GetBufferSetLength(dwSize);
HGLOBAL hGlob = LoadResource(hInst, hRes);
if (hGlob != NULL)
{
LPVOID lpData = LockResource(hGlob);
if (lpData != NULL)
{
memcpy(pszStorage, lpData, dwSize);
bResult = TRUE;
}
FreeResource(hGlob);
}
}
}
return bResult;
}
Coding
The WritePageDB2Web method builds the entire page. The HTML page is construct from 4 piece of
hard coded HTML data inter correlated with dynamic string data.
The hard coded strings are loaded from resources using the LoadLongResource private function.
LoadLongResource(strPagePart1, IDR_HTML_PAGE_PART1);
The dynamic HTML string parts are loaded from the database using customized functions.
*pCtxt << strPagePart1 + GetArticlesFeature + strPagePart2 + GetArticlesTopRated + strPagePart3 + GetArticlesLast10 + strPagePart4.
Outputting the mix of hardcoded and dynamic HTML to the page is done as follows:
*pCtxt << strPagePart1;
if ( ! GetArticlesFeature(AdoDB, &bstrOutput, &bstrError) )
{
*pCtxt << bstrError; return;
}
*pCtxt << bstrOutput;
The dynamic data is built in private functions using the CAdoRecordset and
CAdoDatabase classes. The connection string is hosted in the CWriteLayoutExtension()
constructor string. I chose an Access database for database support. It is possible
to use a direct connection string:
m_bstrConnectionString = L"Provider=Microsoft.Jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=C:\\Projects\\DB\\Db2Isapi.mdb";
or a file connection string (double click the udl file to link it to access DB):
m_bstrConnectionString = L"File Name=C:\\DataLinks\\ConnectionArticleDB2Isapi.udl";
The database is accessed very easily:
//the sql stmt string
_bstr_t bstrSTMT(L"SELECT * from tblArticles where type=1");
MACRO_BEGIN //here the begin code from macro
_bstr_t bstrValue_link, bstrValue_title,
bstrValue_author, bstrValue_headline;
while ( !AdoRS->IsEof() ) //if we have records
{
AdoRS->GetFieldValue("link", &bstrValue_link );
AdoRS->GetFieldValue("title", &bstrValue_title );
AdoRS->GetFieldValue("author", &bstrValue_author );
AdoRS->GetFieldValue("headline",&bstrValue_headline );
wsprintf(wcOut, "TR"\
"TD width=100%% FONT class=links size=1 A href=%s %s/A BR "\
"by B%s/B BR"\
"FONT color=black%s/FONT"\
"/TD"\
"/TR",
(LPCTSTR)bstrValue_link, (LPCTSTR)bstrValue_title,
(LPCTSTR)bstrValue_author, (LPCTSTR)bstrValue_headline
);
AdoRS->MoveNext();
*bstrOutput = (LPCTSTR)wcOut; //the output here
}
MACRO_END //here the end code from macro
To Install
- Copy the folder Web under your web site.
- Provide "Scripts and Executables" Execute Permision
to the Web application. This will allow the IIS web server to execute the WriteLayout.dll.