Tell me more ×
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and enthusiast programmers. It's 100% free, no registration required.

SQL Server 2005. Visual Studio 2010. ASP.NET 2.0 Web Application

This is a web application that supports multiple languages, one of them is Korean. I have “langid” in the query string to differentiate different languages, if langid=3 it is Korean.

In my code behind’ C# code, I read a table using this query:

"select * from Reservations where rsv_id = 1234"

There is a column named "rsv_date" in the table which is reservation date, of type datetime. In the db table its value is "11/22/2012 4:14:37 PM". I checked this in SQL server management studio. But when I read it out, I got "2012-11-22 오후 4:14:37"! Where does that Korean “오후” come from??? Is it because of some culture setting anywhere? But I don’t see where, either in my code or in SQL Server. This caused problem for me, because when I modify this record, it will try to write "2012-11-22 오후 4:14:37" to the db, which of course SQL server reports error.

My original code:

Hashtable reservation = new Hashtable();
SqlCommand sqlCommand = null;
SqlDataReader dataReader;
string queryCommand = "select * from Reservations where rsv_id = @RsvID";
sqlCommand = new SqlCommand(queryCommand, getConnection());
sqlCommand.Connection.Open();
sqlCommand.Parameters.AddWithValue("@RsvID", rsvID);
dataReader = sqlCommand.ExecuteReader();
while (dataReader.Read())
{
reservation["rsvID"] = dataReader["rsv_id"];
reservation["rsvCode"] = dataReader["rsv_code"];
reservation["rsvType"] = dataReader["rsv_type"];
reservation["rsvDate"] = dataReader["rsv_date"]; // where does Korean come from?
...
}
share|improve this question
anyone help me? – martial Nov 26 '12 at 18:31

Know someone who can answer? Share a link to this question via email, Google+, Twitter, or Facebook.

Your Answer

 
discard

By posting your answer, you agree to the privacy policy and terms of service.

Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.