Jo Shields a575963da9 Imported Upstream version 3.6.0
Former-commit-id: da6be194a6b1221998fc28233f2503bd61dd9d14
2014-08-13 10:39:27 +01:00

32 lines
1.9 KiB
XML

<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
<Type Name="OdbcRowUpdatedEventHandler" FullName="System.Data.Odbc.OdbcRowUpdatedEventHandler">
<TypeSignature Language="C#" Value="public delegate void OdbcRowUpdatedEventHandler(object sender, OdbcRowUpdatedEventArgs e);" />
<AssemblyInfo>
<AssemblyName>System.Data</AssemblyName>
<AssemblyVersion>1.0.5000.0</AssemblyVersion>
<AssemblyVersion>2.0.0.0</AssemblyVersion>
</AssemblyInfo>
<Base>
<BaseTypeName>System.Delegate</BaseTypeName>
</Base>
<Parameters>
<Parameter Name="sender" Type="System.Object" />
<Parameter Name="e" Type="System.Data.Odbc.OdbcRowUpdatedEventArgs" />
</Parameters>
<ReturnValue>
<ReturnType>System.Void</ReturnType>
</ReturnValue>
<Docs>
<param name="sender">To be added.</param>
<param name="e">To be added.</param>
<remarks>
<attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />
<para>The handler is not required to perform any action, and your code should avoid generating exceptions or allowing exceptions to propagate to the calling method. Any exceptions that do reach the caller are ignored.</para>
<para>When you create an <see cref="T:System.Data.Odbc.OdbcRowUpdatedEventArgs" /> delegate, you identify the method that will handle the event. To associate the event with your event handler, add an instance of the delegate to the event. The event handler is called whenever the event occurs, unless you remove the delegate. For more information about event handler delegates, see <format type="text/html"><a href="D98FD58B-FA4F-4598-8378-ADDF4355A115">Events and Delegates</a></format> </para>
</remarks>
<summary>
<attribution license="cc4" from="Microsoft" modified="false" />
<para>Represents the method that will handle the <see cref="E:System.Data.Odbc.OdbcDataAdapter.RowUpdated" /> event of an <see cref="T:System.Data.Odbc.OdbcDataAdapter" />.</para>
</summary>
</Docs>
</Type>