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I have the following code:

Using cmd As SqlCommand = Connection.CreateCommand
    cmd.CommandText = "UPDATE someTable SET Value = @Value"
    cmd.CommandText &= " WHERE Id = @Id"
    cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Id", 1234)
    cmd.Parameters.AddWithValue("@Value", "myValue")
    cmd.ExecuteNonQuery
End Using

I wonder if there is any way to get the final SQL-Statment as a String, which should look like this:

UPDATE someTable SET Value = "myValue" WHERE Id = 1234

If anyone wonders why I would do this:

  • for logging (failed) statements
  • for having the possibility to copy & paste it to the Enterprise Manager for testing purposes
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6 Answers

up vote 12 down vote accepted

For logging purposes, I'm afraid there's no nicer way of doing this but to construct the string yourself:

string query = cmd.CommandText;

foreach (SqlParameter p in cmd.Parameters)
{
    query = query.Replace(p.ParameterName, p.Value.ToString());
}

Sorry, I forgot.. p.Value.ToString() should do the job.

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If I do that, I'll have to distinguish between different datatypes. Then I could skip the parameterized query all together and execute that. – dummy Nov 5 '08 at 14:37
Sorry, I forgot.. p.Value.ToString() should do the job. – Kon Nov 5 '08 at 14:57
dummy: not really. if you execute a prepared statement, you are at risk for sql injection attack. +1 for the answer. – Sunny Milenov Nov 5 '08 at 15:05
If i replace in my example @value with someString, it would not be quoted. About the sql injection: I am absolutely with you, I don't want a homebrewn solution. Thanks anyway. +1 for your time. – dummy Nov 5 '08 at 17:16
2  
Theres a gotcha Here. If I have "Param", and "differentParam" as parameters, it renders the differentParam useless as it replaces it to "ValueParam". assuming Param=Value. – Alok Aug 30 '12 at 4:47
show 3 more comments

Whilst not perfect, here's something I knocked up something for TSQL - could be easily tweaked for other flavours... If nothing else it will give you a start point for your own improvements :)

This does an OK job on data types and output parameters etc similar to using "execute stored procedure" in SSMS. We mostly used SPs so the "text" command doesn't account for parameters etc

    public static String ParameterValueForSQL(this SqlParameter sp)
    {
        String retval = "";

        switch (sp.SqlDbType)
        {
            case SqlDbType.Char:
            case SqlDbType.NChar:
            case SqlDbType.NText:
            case SqlDbType.NVarChar:
            case SqlDbType.Text:
            case SqlDbType.Time:
            case SqlDbType.VarChar:
            case SqlDbType.Xml:
            case SqlDbType.Date:
            case SqlDbType.DateTime:
            case SqlDbType.DateTime2:
            case SqlDbType.DateTimeOffset:
                retval = "'" + sp.Value.ToString().Replace("'", "''") + "'";
                break;

            case SqlDbType.Bit:
                retval = (sp.Value.ToBooleanOrDefault(false)) ? "1" : "0";
                break;

            default:
                retval = sp.Value.ToString().Replace("'", "''");
                break;
        }

        return retval;
    }

    public static String CommandAsSql(this SqlCommand sc)
    {
        StringBuilder sql = new StringBuilder();
        Boolean FirstParam = true;

        sql.AppendLine("use " + sc.Connection.Database + ";");
        switch (sc.CommandType)
        {
            case CommandType.StoredProcedure:
                sql.AppendLine("declare @return_value int;");

                foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
                {
                    if ((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.InputOutput) || (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output))
                    {
                        sql.Append("declare " + sp.ParameterName + "\t" + sp.SqlDbType.ToString() + "\t= ");

                        sql.AppendLine(((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output) ? "null" : sp.ParameterValueForSQL()) + ";");

                    }
                }

                sql.AppendLine("exec [" + sc.CommandText + "]");

                foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
                {
                    if (sp.Direction != ParameterDirection.ReturnValue)
                    {
                        sql.Append((FirstParam) ? "\t" : "\t, ");

                        if (FirstParam) FirstParam = false;

                        if (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Input)
                            sql.AppendLine(sp.ParameterName + " = " + sp.ParameterValueForSQL());
                        else

                            sql.AppendLine(sp.ParameterName + " = " + sp.ParameterName + " output");
                    }
                }
                sql.AppendLine(";");

                sql.AppendLine("select 'Return Value' = convert(varchar, @return_value);");

                foreach (SqlParameter sp in sc.Parameters)
                {
                    if ((sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.InputOutput) || (sp.Direction == ParameterDirection.Output))
                    {
                        sql.AppendLine("select '" + sp.ParameterName + "' = convert(varchar, " + sp.ParameterName + ");");
                    }
                }
                break;
            case CommandType.Text:
                sql.AppendLine(sc.CommandText);
                break;
        }

        return sql.ToString();
    }

this generates output along these lines...

use dbMyDatabase;
declare @return_value int;
declare @OutTotalRows   BigInt  = null;
exec [spMyStoredProc]
    @InEmployeeID = 1000686
    , @InPageSize = 20
    , @InPage = 1
    , @OutTotalRows = @OutTotalRows output
;
select 'Return Value' = convert(varchar, @return_value);
select '@OutTotalRows' = convert(varchar, @OutTotalRows);
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2  
Nice job actually trying to tackle the problem here, up-voted for effort alone. – Adam Tolley Apr 5 '11 at 15:36
This is quite helpful - thanks for sharing the code. – Reed Rector Nov 4 '11 at 8:23

You can't, because it does not generate any SQL.

The parameterized query (the one in CommandText) is sent to the SQL Server as the equivalent of a prepared statement. When you execute the command, the parameters and the query text are treated separately. At no point in time a complete SQL string is generated.

You can use SQL Profiler to take a look behind the scenes.

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If you're using SQL Server, you could use SQL Server Profiler (if you have it) to view the command string that is actually executed. That would be useful for copy/paste testing purpuses but not for logging I'm afraid.

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Profiler is hands-down your best option.

You might need to copy a set of statements from profiler due to the prepare + execute steps involved.

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This solution works for me right now. Maybe it is usefull to someone. Please excuse all the redundancy.

    Public Shared Function SqlString(ByVal cmd As SqlCommand) As String
    Dim sbRetVal As New System.Text.StringBuilder()
    For Each item As SqlParameter In cmd.Parameters
        Select Case item.DbType
            Case DbType.String
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("DECLARE {0} AS VARCHAR(255)", item.ParameterName)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("SET {0} = '{1}'", item.ParameterName, item.Value)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()

            Case DbType.DateTime
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("DECLARE {0} AS DATETIME", item.ParameterName)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("SET {0} = '{1}'", item.ParameterName, item.Value)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()

            Case DbType.Guid
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("DECLARE {0} AS UNIQUEIDENTIFIER", item.ParameterName)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("SET {0} = '{1}'", item.ParameterName, item.Value)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()

            Case DbType.Int32
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("DECLARE {0} AS int", item.ParameterName)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()
                sbRetVal.AppendFormat("SET {0} = {1}", item.ParameterName, item.Value)
                sbRetVal.AppendLine()

            Case Else
                Stop

        End Select
    Next

    sbRetVal.AppendLine("")
    sbRetVal.AppendLine(cmd.CommandText)

    Return sbRetVal.ToString()
End Function
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