How to Access Smartsheet Data Using Entity Framework



This article shows how to access Smartsheet data using an Entity Framework code-first approach. Entity Framework 6 is available in .NET 4.5 and above.

Microsoft Entity Framework serves as an object-relational mapping framework for working with data represented as objects. Although Visual Studio offers the ADO.NET Entity Data Model wizard to automatically generate the Entity Model, this model-first approach may present challenges when your data source undergoes changes or when you require greater control over entity operations. In this article, we will delve into the code-first approach for accessing Smartsheet data through the CData ADO.NET Provider, providing you with more flexibility and control.

About Smartsheet Data Integration

CData provides the easiest way to access and integrate live data from Smartsheet. Customers use CData connectivity to:

  • Read and write attachments, columns, comments and discussions.
  • View the data in individuals cells, report on cell history, and more.
  • Perform Smartsheet-specific actions like deleting or downloading attachments, creating, copying, deleting, or moving sheets, and moving or copying rows to another sheet.

Users frequently integrate Smartsheet with analytics tools such as Tableau, Crystal Reports, and Excel. Others leverage our tools to replicate Smartsheet data to databases or data warehouses.


Getting Started


  1. Open Visual Studio and create a new Windows Form Application. This article uses a C# project with .NET 4.5.
  2. Run the command 'Install-Package EntityFramework' in the Package Manger Console in Visual Studio to install the latest release of Entity Framework.
  3. Modify the App.config file in the project to add a reference to the Smartsheet Entity Framework 6 assembly and the connection string.

    Smartsheet uses the OAuth authentication standard. To authenticate using OAuth, you will need to register an app to obtain the OAuthClientId, OAuthClientSecret, and CallbackURL connection properties.

    However, for testing purposes you can instead use the Personal Access Token you get when you create an application; set this to the OAuthAccessToken connection property.

    <configuration> ... <connectionStrings> <add name="SmartsheetContext" connectionString="Offline=False;OAuthClientId=MyOauthClientId;OAuthClientSecret=MyOAuthClientSecret;CallbackURL=http://localhost:33333;InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH" providerName="System.Data.CData.Smartsheet" /> </connectionStrings> <entityFramework> <providers> ... <provider invariantName="System.Data.CData.Smartsheet" type="System.Data.CData.Smartsheet.SmartsheetProviderServices, System.Data.CData.Smartsheet.Entities.EF6" /> </providers> <entityFramework> </configuration> </code>
  4. Add a reference to System.Data.CData.Smartsheet.Entities.EF6.dll, located in the lib -> 4.0 subfolder in the installation directory.
  5. Build the project at this point to ensure everything is working correctly. Once that's done, you can start coding using Entity Framework.
  6. Add a new .cs file to the project and add a class to it. This will be your database context, and it will extend the DbContext class. In the example, this class is named SmartsheetContext. The following code example overrides the OnModelCreating method to make the following changes:
    • Remove PluralizingTableNameConvention from the ModelBuilder Conventions.
    • Remove requests to the MigrationHistory table.
    using System.Data.Entity; using System.Data.Entity.Infrastructure; using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration.Conventions; class SmartsheetContext : DbContext { public SmartsheetContext() { } protected override void OnModelCreating(DbModelBuilder modelBuilder) { // To remove the requests to the Migration History table Database.SetInitializer<SmartsheetContext>(null); // To remove the plural names modelBuilder.Conventions.Remove<PluralizingTableNameConvention>(); } }
  7. Create another .cs file and name it after the Smartsheet entity you are retrieving, for example, Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget. In this file, define both the Entity and the Entity Configuration, which will resemble the example below: using System.Data.Entity.ModelConfiguration; using System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.Schema; [System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.Schema.Table("Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget")] public class Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget { [System.ComponentModel.DataAnnotations.Key] public System.String TaskName { get; set; } public System.String Progress { get; set; } }
  8. Now that you have created an entity, add the entity to your context class: public DbSet<Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget> Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget { set; get; }
  9. With the context and entity finished, you are now ready to query the data in a separate class. For example: SmartsheetContext context = new SmartsheetContext(); context.Configuration.UseDatabaseNullSemantics = true; var query = from line in context.Sheet_Event_Plan_Budget select line;

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Easy-to-use Smartsheet client enables .NET-based applications to easily consume Smartsheet Sheets, Contacts, Folders, Groups, Users, etc.