53

I read the MSDN documentation and examples here and I know that the correct syntax for a Paramters.Add call is :

   command.Parameters.Add("@ID", SqlDbType.Int);
   command.Parameters["@ID"].Value = customerID; 

Where you have to specify the Parameter Name, the SqlDbType AND the Value with .Value.

Now the correct syntax for a Parameters.AddWithValue call is :

   command.Parameters.AddWithValue("@demographics", demoXml);

Single line and skip the Type part.

My Question is : How is it that when I do it like this,

   command.Parameters.Add("@demographics", demoXml);
   // .Add method with .AddWithValue syntax

I don't get any compiling error and even weirder, everything seems to work properly when the code is executed ?

5 Answers 5

79

There is no difference in terms of functionality. In fact, both do this:

return this.Add(new SqlParameter(parameterName, value));

The reason they deprecated the old one in favor of AddWithValue is to add additional clarity, as well as because the second parameter is object, which makes it not immediately obvious to some people which overload of Add was being called, and they resulted in wildly different behavior.

Take a look at this example:

 SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand();
 command.Parameters.Add("@name", 0);

At first glance, it looks like it is calling the Add(string name, object value) overload, but it isn't. It's calling the Add(string name, SqlDbType type) overload! This is because 0 is implicitly convertible to enum types. So these two lines:

 command.Parameters.Add("@name", 0);

and

 command.Parameters.Add("@name", 1);

Actually result in two different methods being called. 1 is not convertible to an enum implicitly, so it chooses the object overload. With 0, it chooses the enum overload.

4
10

The difference is the implicit conversion when using AddWithValue. If you know that your executing SQL query (stored procedure) is accepting a value of type int, nvarchar, etc, there's no reason in re-declaring it in your code.

For complex type scenarios (example would be DateTime, float), I'll probably use Add since it's more explicit but AddWithValue for more straight-forward type scenarios (Int to Int).

3

Without explicitly providing the type as in command.Parameters.Add("@ID", SqlDbType.Int);, it will try to implicitly convert the input to what it is expecting.

The downside of this, is that the implicit conversion may not be the most optimal of conversions and may cause a performance hit.

There is a discussion about this very topic here: http://forums.asp.net/t/1200255.aspx/1

2

When we use CommandObj.Parameter.Add() it takes 2 parameters, the first is procedure parameter and the second is its data type, while .AddWithValue() takes 2 parameters, the first is procedure parameter and the second is the data variable

CommandObj.Parameter.Add("@ID",SqlDbType.Int).Value=textBox1.Text;

for .AddWithValue

CommandObj.Parameter.AddWitheValue("@ID",textBox1.Text);

where ID is the parameter of stored procedure which data type is Int

0

There is no difference in terms of functionality


The addwithvalue method takes an object as the value. There is no type data type checking. Potentially, that could lead to error if data type does not match with SQL table. The add method requires that you specify the Database type first. This helps to reduce such errors.

For more detail Please click here

1
  • The type conversion errors are a difference in functionality. Also when you dont specify the type, it will be inferred. For strings this means a widening conversion to NVARCHAR. If your table is VARCHAR then SQL will convert the value of that column for every row in the table for the query. It wont be an error, and the end result will probably be the same, but functionally its different.
    – StingyJack
    Jun 30, 2021 at 17:39

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