3

I am trying to retrieve a list of customers from SQL Server, problem is, the list is only returning copies of the same row. I thought about possibly adding a foreach loop in my datareader, but I'm not sure just how to implement that. Any help is appreciated.

public IList<Customer> GetCustomers()
    {
        IList<Customer> customers = new List<Customer>();

        var conn = new SqlConnection(ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["conn"].ConnectionString);
        conn.Open();
        try
        {
            var command = new SqlCommand
            {
                CommandText = "SELECT * FROM customer",
                Connection = conn
            };
            SqlDataReader reader = command.ExecuteReader();
            var customer = new Customer();
            while (reader.Read())
            {
                customer.CustId = (int) reader["cust_id"];
                customer.CustCode = (string) reader["cust_code"];
                customer.CustName = (string) reader["cust_name"];
                customer.CustDescr = (string) reader["cust_descr"];
                customer.CreatedDt = (DateTime) reader["created_dt"];
                customers.Add(customer);
            }
            return customers;
        }
        finally
        {
            conn.Close();
            conn.Dispose();
        }
    }

4 Answers 4

8

You need to move var customer = new Customer(); into the while loop (otherwise, you're only creating one instance of Customer, repeatedly overwriting its properties, and adding that same instance multiple times to the list):

while (reader.Read())
{
    var customer = new Customer();
    // As before...
4

The reason you are seeing copies is because you keep adding a reference to the same Customer instance to the collection. As you update the object in your while loop, each reference in the List also gets updated.

You should, instead, be creating a new instance in each iteration of the loop.

3

Try this:

        while (reader.Read())
        {
          var customer = new Customer();
            customer.CustId = (int) reader["cust_id"];
            customer.CustCode = (string) reader["cust_code"];
            customer.CustName = (string) reader["cust_name"];
            customer.CustDescr = (string) reader["cust_descr"];
            customer.CreatedDt = (DateTime) reader["created_dt"];
            customers.Add(customer);
        }
0

I prefer it like below.

Consider ...

Why build a list when you might not always want to?

SqlConnection, SqlCommand and SqlDataReader implement IDisposable.

Why use a try-finally when using is simpler and equivalent?

Why not use object initializers?

Why return all columns when you only need 5?

Don't open the connection until you have to.


public IEnumerable<Customer> GetCustomers()
{
    using (var connection = new SqlConnection(
        ConfigurationManager.ConnectionStrings["conn"].ConnectionString));
    {
        using (var command = new SqlCommand
                {
                    CommandText = 
                        "SELECT " +
                            "cust_id, " +
                            "cust_code, " +
                            "cust_name, " +
                            "cust_descr, " +
                            "created_dt " +
                            " FROM customer",
                    Connection = connection
                })
        {
            connection.Open();
            using (var reader = command.ExecuteReader())
            {
                while (reader.Read())
                {
                    yield return new Customer
                    {
                        CustId = reader.GetInt32(0),
                        CustCode = reader.GetString(1),
                        CustName = reader.GetString(2),
                        CustDescr = reader.GetString(3),
                        CreatedDt = reader.GetDateTime(4)
                    };
                }
            }
        }
    }
}

then, if your need a list

var customers =  GetCustomers().ToList();

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