I have the following code as a stored procedure in SQL but it's not accepting the @DBNAME stating it needs to be declared but I already declared it.
SET ANSI_NULLS ON
GO
SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON
GO
CREATE PROCEDURE UpdateSQL
-- Add the parameters for the stored procedure here
@UpdateField varchar(25),
@UpdateValue varchar(25),
@FilterField varchar(25),
@FilterValue varchar(25),
@DBNAME sysname
AS
BEGIN
-- SET NOCOUNT ON added to prevent extra result sets from
-- interfering with SELECT statements.
SET NOCOUNT ON;
-- Insert statements for procedure here
UPDATE @DBNAME SET @UpdateField = @UpdateValue WHERE @FilterField = @FilterValue
END
GO
Here is the c# function that calls the SQL procedure:
internal static bool UpdateSql(SqlArgs pSqlArgs)
{
var pwd = GetPwd();
var sqlCred = new SqlCredential(Sqluser, pwd);
var tCatalog = GetDbo(pSqlArgs.PCatalog);
var sqlConnection = new SqlConnection
{
ConnectionString = $"Data Source={SqlServer};Initial Catalog={tCatalog};",
Credential = sqlCred
};
var sqlCommand = new SqlCommand
{
Connection = sqlConnection,
CommandText = "UpdateSQL",
Parameters = { new SqlParameter("@DB", pSqlArgs.PDbo), new SqlParameter("@UpdateField", pSqlArgs.PUpdateField),
new SqlParameter("@UpdateValue", pSqlArgs.PUpdateValue), new SqlParameter("@FilterField", pSqlArgs.PFilterField),
new SqlParameter("@FilterValue", pSqlArgs.PFilterValue) },
CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure,
};
try
{
sqlConnection.Open();
return sqlCommand.ExecuteNonQuery().Equals(1);
}
catch (SqlException ex)
{
MessageBox.Show($@"Error: {ex.Message}", @"Error", MessageBoxButtons.OK, MessageBoxIcon.Exclamation);
return false;
}
finally
{
sqlConnection.Close();
}
}
The ultimate function I'm trying to run is: USE @Database UPDATE @Table SET @UpdateField = @UpdateValue WHERE @FilterField = @FilterValue