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I am in the process of converting several queries which were hard-coded into the application and built on the fly to parameterized queries. I'm having trouble with one particular query, which has an in clause:

UPDATE TABLE_1 SET STATUS = 4 WHERE ID IN (1, 14, 145, 43);

The first parameter is easy, as it's just a normal parameter:

MySqlCommand m = new MySqlCommand("UPDATE TABLE_1 SET STATUS = ? WHERE ID IN (?);");
m.Parameters.Add(new MySqlParameter("", 2));

However, the second parameter is a list of integers representing the ids of the rows that need updating. How do I pass in a list of integers for a single parameter? Alternatively, how would you go about setting up this query so that you don't have to completely build it each and every time you call it, and can prevent SQL injection attacks?

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Duplicate of stackoverflow.com/questions/337704/… (although that's SQL server instead of mysql; unlikely to be really different though) – Jon Skeet Mar 16 at 13:43
The solution offered there was acknowledged to be incredibly slow, although it does answer the second half of my question. – Elie Mar 16 at 13:46
There are lots of solutions offered there. The accepted answer isn't the most popular one. – Jon Skeet Mar 16 at 13:50
True, but there's already been one answer here that wasn't in that question, so I guess it paid off to ask the question again. – Elie Mar 16 at 13:51
There are non-trivial differences between Sql Server and MySql. I wouldn't trust an answer for one to apply to the other. – Adam Lassek Mar 16 at 14:03

5 Answers

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You could build up the parametrised query "on the fly" based on the (presumably) variable number of parameters, and iterate over that to pass them in.

So, something like:

List foo; // assuming you have a List of items, in reality, it may be a List<int> or a List<myObject> with an id property, etc.

StringBuilder query = new StringBuilder( "UPDATE TABLE_1 SET STATUS = ? WHERE ID IN ( ?")
for( int i = 1; i++; i < foo.Count )
{   // Bit naive 
    query.Append( ", ?" );
}

query.Append( " );" );

MySqlCommand m = new MySqlCommand(query.ToString());
for( int i = 1; i++; i < foo.Count )
{
    m.Parameters.Add(new MySqlParameter(...));
}
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I was just thinking that. But would I gain the performance benefits of having a stored parameterized query if I did that? – Elie Mar 16 at 13:48
Ado.Net suggests best performance is by creating a new connection, using it once and throwing it away -- at least for other SQL engines; After all, the query engine could optimise based on the query string to reuse them... – Rowland Shaw Mar 16 at 13:54
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This is not possible in MySQL. You can create a required number of parameters and do UPDATE ... IN (?,?,?,?). This prevents injection attacks (but still requires you to rebuild the query for each parameter count).

Other way is to pass a comma-separated string and parse it.

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vote up 0 vote down

You cannot use parameters for an IN clause.

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i'd suggest creating a function (assuming that mysql supports user defined functions) to break the parameter apart to return a table.

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Loop round your list of integers and perform individual updates.

MSSQL 2008 offers table-valued parameters to avoid this issue, I'm not aware of any similar functionality in MySQL.

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That would be incredibly inefficient, considering that this query could, in some cases, have thousands of items in the IN clause. – Elie Mar 16 at 13:47
Isn't there a limit to how many items you can have in an IN clause? – Svish Mar 16 at 13:56

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