If you are using MS SQL-Server, i would use a Stored Procedure in database to insert new records and a CLR(scalar-valued function)to get the next bill-number. On this way you could ensure that the number is unique.
The SP could look like:
CREATE PROCEDURE [dbo].[InsertBill]
@idBill int OUTPUT,
@CreationDate datetime OUTPUT,
@Name varchar(50) OUTPUT,
@BillNumber char(10) OUTPUT
with execute as Owner
AS
INSERT INTO tBill(CreationDate, Name, BillNumber)
VALUES (GetDate(), @Name, dbo.GetNextBillNumber())
;SELECT @idBill=idBill,@CreationDate=CreationDate, @Name=Name, @BillNumber=BillNumber
FROM tBill WHERE (@idBill = SCOPE_IDENTITY())
The next number will be MAX(BillNumber)+1
, the format is 10 chars(A+9 digits), the CLR to generate the next bill-number:
CREATE FUNCTION [dbo].[GetNextBillNumber]()
RETURNS CHAR(10)
AS
BEGIN
DECLARE @BillNumber CHAR(10);
DECLARE @nextBillNumber int;
SET @nextBillNumber = CONVERT(int,SUBSTRING((SELECT MAX(BillNumber) FROM tBill),2,9)) + 1;
SET @BillNumber = 'A' + RIGHT('000000000'+ CONVERT(VARCHAR,@nextBillNumber),9)
return @BillNumber
END
Note: not 100% tested but you should understand what i mean.
Edit: You also should add a unique constraint to guarantee the uniqueness. Then it's techniqually impossible to insert two records with the same Bill-Number. In this example i've presumed that the table's primary-key is not the Bill-Number itself but an int-column which Is Identity(Auto-Increment, here with SSMS).
Here are informations on how to call a stored-procedure from ADO.NET.