2

I am using the following code to set up parameters for a call to a stored procedure:

        List<SqlParameter> parameterList = new List<SqlParameter>();
        parameterList.Add(new SqlParameter("@Title", adminTest.Title));
        parameterList.Add(new SqlParameter("@Text", adminTest.Text));

        var questionsList = new SqlParameter("@Questions", questions);
        questionsList.TypeName = "dbo.QuestionList";
        parameterList.Add(questionsList);

The code snippet works but what I would like to know is if anyone found a way to set the TypeName in the new SqlParameter constructor? I tried looking at the documentation but the only thing I can find is adding the typename afterwards.

1
  • QuestionList is your table type??
    – Dgan
    Oct 5, 2014 at 13:44

2 Answers 2

5

You can accomplish this with initializers. The example below specifies strongly-typed parameters and max length of variable values, which is a good practice from a SQL performance perspective.

    List<SqlParameter> parameterList = new List<SqlParameter>()
        {
            new SqlParameter("@Title", SqlDbType.VarChar) {Size = 30, Value = adminTest.Title},
            new SqlParameter("@Text", SqlDbType.VarChar) {Size = 30, Value = adminTest.Text},
            new SqlParameter("@Questions", SqlDbType.Structured) {TypeName = "dbo.QuestionList", Value = questions}
        };
1
  • 1
    +1 as this does work and definitely good to mention explicit setting of Size (though that can also be set in the constructor and does not require using an initializer), but it should still be noted that if CommandType is set to StoredProcedure then the TypeName property is not required or needed. Oct 5, 2014 at 18:05
0

try like this:

Create datatable in C#

 DataTable myDataTable = new DataTable("QuestionList");
    myDataTable.Columns.Add("Title", typeof(string));
    myDataTable.Columns.Add("Text", typeof(string));
    myDataTable.Rows.Add("Title", "Text1");
    myDataTable.Rows.Add("Text", "Text2");

Create sql parameter

  string conStr = "Server=localhost;Database=master;Trusted_Connection=True;";
        con = new SqlConnection(conStr);
        con.Open();
  using (con)
        {
            SqlCommand insertCommand = new SqlCommand("InsertQuestionList", con);
            SqlParameter tvpParam = insertCommand.Parameters.AddWithValue(
                "@QuestionList", myDataTable);
            insertCommand.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure;

            tvpParam.SqlDbType = SqlDbType.Structured;
            tvpParam.TypeName = "dbo.QuestionList";
            tvpParam.Value = myDataTable;
            insertCommand.ExecuteNonQuery();
        }

        con.Close();

Create table type

 CREATE TYPE dbo.QuestionList AS TABLE
    ( Title varchar(50), TEXT nvarchar(50) )

PRODCEDURE to insert

ALTER PROCEDURE  InsertQuestionList
   @QuestionList QuestionList READONLY
AS
BEGIN
 --insert into Your table
 select * from @QuestionList
END
GO
3
  • -1 This does not work, at least not in any way that my testing shows. If CommandType is set to StoredProcedure then the TypeName property is not required so you don't see that the name of the DataTable is not used at all. If CommandType is set to Text then the TypeName property is required and you do see that the name of the DataTable is not used, no matter what it is set to. Besides, if it were to be used, it would at least need to be "dbo.QuestionList", but even fixing that does not help. Oct 5, 2014 at 16:00
  • @srutzky updated and tested on my pc now working fine
    – Dgan
    Oct 5, 2014 at 16:57
  • Thanks for updating and verifying. The only issue left is that the question is specific to not specifying the TypeName property as an additional step. Also, while your code works, you could remove the line that sets TypeName and it would still work as the CommandType is StoredProcedure. But that shows that it isn't looking at the name of the DataTable. Oct 5, 2014 at 18:37

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.