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I have avoided working with fetchxml as I have been unsure the best way to handle the result data after calling crmService.Fetch(fetchXml). In a couple of situations, I have used an XDocument with LINQ to retrieve the data from this data structure, such as:

XDocument resultset = XDocument.Parse(_service.Fetch(fetchXml));
if (resultset.Root == null || !resultset.Root.Elements("result").Any())
{
    return;
}
foreach (var displayItem in resultset.Root.Elements("result").Select(item => item.Element(displayAttributeName)).Distinct())
{
    if (displayItem!= null && displayItem.Value != null)
    {
        dropDownList.Items.Add(displayItem.Value);    
    }
}

What is the best way to handle fetchxml result data, so that it can be easily used. Applications such as passing these records into an ASP.NET datagrid would be quite useful.

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4 Answers

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If you want to use a fetchxml AND get a returnset of the BusinessEntityType, you can use the FetchXmlToQueryExpression method to get a query expression from the fetchxml and then apply the query expression in a RetrieveMultiple method as in

FetchXmlToQueryExpressionResponse qe = (FetchXmlToQueryExpressionResponse) service.Execute(fetch);

Note that the reverse method QueryExpressiontoFetchXml exists as well

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vote up 1 vote down

I enjoy the flexibility of FetchXML and so I developed the following function that returns a datatable for use in binding to grids and repeaters and so forth.

        /// <summary>
    /// Takes a CRM FetchXML query and returns a DataTable
    /// </summary>
    /// <param name="fetchXml">The FetchXML query</param>
    /// <param name="requiredFields">A array of columns you'd expect returned. This is required as if there is no data for a field/column CRM will not return it which could impact databinding</param>
    /// <returns>A datatable containing the results of the FetchXML</returns>
    public static DataTable FetchXML2DataTable(string fetchXml, string[] requiredFields)
    {
        CrmService tomService = new CrmService();
        tomService = CrmWebService;

        string result = tomService.Fetch(fetchXml);
        DataSet ds = new DataSet();

        System.IO.StringReader reader = new System.IO.StringReader(result);
        ds.ReadXml(reader);

        DataTable dt = ds.Tables[1];

        //check all required columns are present otherwise add them to make life easier for databinding at the top level
        //caused by CRM not returning fields if they contain no data
        foreach (string field in requiredFields)
        {   //Check for column names and nested tables
            if ((dt.Columns.IndexOf(field) < 0) && (dt.DataSet.Tables.IndexOf(field) <0))
            {                    
                //Add column to datatable even though it is empty for reason stated above
                dt.Columns.Add(new DataColumn(field));
            }
        }            

        return dt;
    }

The requiredFields string array is there because columns aren't returned if your result set contains no data with that column, however I might want the column in place for the exact reason of binding to datagrids etc.

CrmService is a singleton class that initates the webservice.

Hopefully this is of use to you.

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vote up 0 vote down

You could also go for LinqtoCRM, that'll handle the XML parsing for you: http://codeplex.com/linqtocrm

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vote up 1 vote down

I typically avoid FetchXML for this very reason. You can use the RetrieveMultiple to get strongly typed BusinessEntity objects and basically do the same stuff.

But if you want to use the FetchXML this sample should cover you:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms914457.aspx

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Yeah, I have been mostly using RetrieveMultiple, but in this case I need to retrieve some attributes and add some conditions based on joined entities, which fetchXml will allow me to do, and the QueryExpression object will not allow. – Luke Baulch Jul 31 at 1:52
Luke, are you sure? Retrieval by QueryExpression also has ways to define joins. – Dmitriy Matveev Jul 31 at 2:04
Yes, you can define joins, but I'm fairly sure you can't return attributes from a joined entity. – Luke Baulch Jul 31 at 2:29

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