Till now I am using two try catch blocks for my queries. The first one will throw an error if the connection is not be established. The second one checks if SqlCommand
is executed successfully. Like the example below
try
{
using(varconnection=newSqlConnection())
using(varcmd=newSqlCommand())
{
connection.Open();
var transaction=connection.BeginTransaction();
cmd.Connection=connection;
cmd.Transaction=transaction;
try
{
cmd.CommandText="InsertintoCustomers(Name)values('Dimitri')";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
cmd.CommandText="InsertintoCustomers(Name)values('George')";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
transaction.Commit();
}
catch
{
try{transaction.Rollback();}catch{}
}
}
}
catch
{
}
I found a second Example that looks more clear for me.
SqlTransactiontransaction=null;
using(varconnection=newSqlConnection())
using(varcmd=newSqlCommand())
{
try
{
connection.Open();
transaction=connection.BeginTransaction();
cmd.Connection=connection;
cmd.Transaction=transaction;
cmd.CommandText="InsertintoCustomers(Name)values('Dimitri')";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
cmd.CommandText="InsertintoCustomers(Name)values('George')";
cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
transaction.Commit();
transaction.Dispose();
transaction=null;
}
catch
{
if(transaction!=null)
{
try{transaction.Rollback();}catch{}
}
}
}
Are both of them having the same result? Which of two is more preferable?
connection.Open();
throws, then it is useless totransaction.Rollback
and it will throw aNullReferenceException
(that will be caught by the secondtry...catch
).TransactionScope
first. An explicitTransaction.Rollback()
is almost never necessary in any case, because the rollback happens automatically if.Commit()
hasn't been called by the time the transaction is disposed (which you should be doing, in ausing
block).transaction.Rollback()
trusting thattransaction
is!= null
... I have even seen (equivalent to the second)transaction?.Rollback()
around... But the suggestions of Jeroen are much better.using
everywhere you can is key to correct .NET programmingconnection.BeginTransaction
will returns non null transaction or throws ... but if throws then execution will end in outer empty catch and never hit rolback ... same story whenconnection.Open
would throw