5

I am new to working with Entity Framework in a sample ASP.NET/MVC 3.0 VS2010 project. I have imported two stored procedures as Function Imports and, in doing so, created a complex data type for each.

I am trying to run the following c# code:

public ComplexDataType RunStoredProc()
{
    var context = new DbEntities();
    int param1 = 370;
    int param2 = -1;
    string param3 = "Current";

    ComplexDataType result = new ComplexDataType;
    result = context.StoredProc(param1, param2, param3);
    return result;
}

And I'm getting the error:

Cannot implicitly convert data type 
    System.Data.Objects.ObjectResult(ComplexDataType) to 'ComplexDataType'

What am I doing wrong? How do I properly store the results of the stored proc in a complex data type?

1
  • show your mapping and StoredProc method.
    – Pawel
    Nov 4, 2012 at 2:36

2 Answers 2

2

You can use DbSet.SqlQuery method to get results from a stored procedure.

int param1=12;
int param2=53;
var results=context.ComplexDataTypes.SqlQuery.
                       ("dbo.YourSPNameHere @p0 @p1", param1,param2).Single();

Assuming you have a collection like this defined your DbContext class.

public DbSet<ComplexDataType> ComplexDataTypes { set;get;}

More information is available here.

4
  • The project isn't recognizing context.Database.SqlQuery, but it gives me an option for context.ExecuteStoreQuery; following your syntax above with the same command, it's giving me the same error -- can not implicitly convert. Any other ideas?
    – Nick L.
    Nov 5, 2012 at 2:50
  • which version of entity framework you are using ? is your stored proc returning something back ?
    – Shyju
    Nov 5, 2012 at 3:35
  • Using EF 4.0; stored proc returns about 10 columns and usually between 5 and 15 rows
    – Nick L.
    Nov 5, 2012 at 5:14
  • Well, let me be clear -- the stored proc ends in a SELECT statement that outputs that data, though the query itself does not contain an explicit "return" clause. Although if that is an issue I don't think that would be related to the complex data type. The complex data type, when set up in VS2010, does recognize all expected columns, and I can call them from an instantiated complex data type result set ("result") in the OP; just can't write anything into it.
    – Nick L.
    Nov 5, 2012 at 5:21
1

Try and change this:

result = context.StoredProc(param1, param2, param3);

to this:

result = (ComplexDataType) context.StoredProc(param1, param2, param3);
1
  • Same error here; it won't let me cast as the complex data type. Still displays same error as above. Any other ideas?
    – Nick L.
    Nov 5, 2012 at 2:33

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