LINQ to PDFMonkey Data
This article illustrates using LINQ to access tables within the PDFMonkey via the CData ADO.NET Data Provider for PDFMonkey. To achieve this, we will use LINQ to Entity Framework, which facilitates the generation of connections and can be seamlessly employed with any CData ADO.NET Data Providers to access data through LINQ.
See the help documentation for a guide to setting up an EF 6 project to use the provider.
- In a new project in Visual Studio, right-click on the project and choose to add a new item. Add an ADO.NET Entity Data Model.
- Choose EF Designer from Database and click Next.
- Add a new Data Connection, and change your data source type to "CData PDFMonkey Data Source".
Enter your data source connection information.
Using API Key Authentication
PdfMonkey uses API key authentication. To obtain an API key:
- Log in to your PdfMonkey account at https://app.pdfmonkey.io
- Navigate to your account settings
- Open the API Key page
- Copy your API key
After obtaining your API key, set the following connection properties:
- AuthScheme: Set this to APIKey.
- APIKey: Set this to your PdfMonkey API key.
Example Connection String
Profile=C:\profiles\PdfMonkey.apip;AuthScheme=APIKey;ProfileSettings="APIKey=your_api_key"
Connecting to PdfMonkey
Once the authentication is configured, you can connect to PdfMonkey and query data from any of the available tables such as CurrentUser, DocumentCards, Documents, DocumentTemplateCards, and DocumentTemplates.
Below is a typical connection string:
Profile=C:\profiles\PdfMonkey.apip;AuthScheme=APIKey;ProfileSettings="APIKey=your_api_key"
- If saving your entity connection to App.Config, set an entity name. In this example we are setting APIEntities as our entity connection in App.Config.
- Enter a model name and select any tables or views you would like to include in the model.
Using the entity you created, you can now perform select commands. For example:
APIEntities context = new APIEntities();
var currentuserQuery = from currentuser in context.CurrentUser
select currentuser;
foreach (var result in currentuserQuery) {
Console.WriteLine("{0} {1} ", result.Id, result.);
}
See "LINQ and Entity Framework" chapter in the help documentation for example queries of the supported LINQ.