Just searching the Test.cs file you could find this example
public void TestProcSupport()
{
var p = new DynamicParameters();
p.Add("a", 11);
p.Add("b", dbType: DbType.Int32, direction: ParameterDirection.Output);
p.Add("c", dbType: DbType.Int32, direction: ParameterDirection.ReturnValue);
connection.Execute(@"create proc #TestProc
@a int,
@b int output
as
begin
set @b = 999
select 1111
return @a
end");
connection.Query<int>("#TestProc", p, commandType: CommandType.StoredProcedure).First().IsEqualTo(1111);
p.Get<int>("c").IsEqualTo(11);
p.Get<int>("b").IsEqualTo(999);
}
So, I suppose that your C# code could be written as
public void InsertData()
{
var p = new DynamicParameters();
p.Add("VAR1", "John");
p.Add("VAR2", "McEnroe");
p.Add("BASEID", 1);
p.Add("NEWID", dbType: DbType.Int32, direction: ParameterDirection.Output);
connection.Query<int>("SP_MYTESTpROC", p, commandType: CommandType.StoredProcedure);
int newID = p.Get<int>("NEWID");
}
As a side note, do not use SP as prefix for your stored procedure. It is reserved for system defined procedures and you could find yourself in troubles if Microsoft decides to use the same name. Albeit improbable it is a bad practice and why risk?
sp_
prefix for your stored procedures. Microsoft has reserved that prefix for its own use (see Naming Stored Procedures), and you do run the risk of a name clash sometime in the future. It's also bad for your stored procedure performance. It's best to just simply avoidsp_
and use something else as a prefix - or no prefix at all!dapper
... For those interested, I showed a MySQL / c# Visual Studio 2015 working example HERE. That situation was one of IN andOUT
parameters. The focus naturally was on theOUT
.