SWS GetLetterTemplateInfo Method
Retrieves a list of available Letter .PDF templates.
Parameters
Name | Data Type | Is Required |
---|---|---|
OrgID | Long | Required |
Description | The organization’s ID number. | |
SiteID | Long | Required |
Description | The site’s ID number. This can be found using the GetSiteList method. | |
TemplateLevel | TemplateLevel | Required |
Description | Filter for the types of documents you want retrieved. Available values:
|
Returned Parameters
Name | Data Type |
---|---|
POST_LTR_TEMPLATE_INFO | POST_LTR_TEMPLATE_INFO |
Description | The object containing the info about the letter template/s. |
Example
As with every method we need to pass in credentials. We do this with the LookupUser request object.
We will assume you have a web reference, let us name it SWS, in your Visual Studio project. At this point we need to define our objects. We will need the standard service object, a getLtrTemplateInfo request object, and a getLtrTemplateInfo response object. We can define and create those like this:
// Create a request and response objects
SWS.WSSoapClient service = new SWS.WSSoapClient();
SWS.getLtrTemplateInfo_Request request = new SWS.getLtrTemplateInfo_Request();
SWS.getLtrTemplateInfo_Response response;
Here’s my sample code of the Request object.
// getLetterTemplateInfo Request
request.OrgID = 123456;
request.SiteID = 123456;
request.TemplateLevel = SWS.templateLevelVals.SITE_ONLY;
Finally we can call the method and pass across the login object and the request object to retrieve the letter templates for that organization or site. It’s a good idea to do this in a Try Catch block.
// Call the method that will load the response object
try
{
response = service.getLetterTemplateInfo(user_request, request);
}
catch (Exception ex)
{
MessageBox.Show(ex.Message);
}
Note that if something goes wrong the service will respond with an exception. You will want to capture the message returned in that exception so it can be debugged.
For a full list of methods see SWS Methods.