SqlDataAdapter.DeleteCommand Property
Definition
Important
Some information relates to prerelease product that may be substantially modified before it’s released. Microsoft makes no warranties, express or implied, with respect to the information provided here.
Gets or sets a Transact-SQL statement or stored procedure to delete records from the data set.
public:
property Microsoft::Data::SqlClient::SqlCommand ^ DeleteCommand { Microsoft::Data::SqlClient::SqlCommand ^ get(); void set(Microsoft::Data::SqlClient::SqlCommand ^ value); };
public Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand DeleteCommand { get; set; }
member this.DeleteCommand : Microsoft.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommand with get, set
Public Property DeleteCommand As SqlCommand
Property Value
A SqlCommand used during Update(DataSet) to delete records in the database that correspond to deleted rows in the DataSet.
Examples
The following example creates a SqlDataAdapter and sets the SelectCommand, InsertCommand, UpdateCommand, and DeleteCommand properties. It assumes you have already created a SqlConnection object.
using Microsoft.Data.SqlClient;
class Program
{
static void Main()
{
}
public static SqlDataAdapter CreateCustomerAdapter(
SqlConnection connection)
{
SqlDataAdapter adapter = new SqlDataAdapter();
// Create the SelectCommand.
SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand("SELECT * FROM Customers " +
"WHERE Country = @Country AND City = @City", connection);
// Add the parameters for the SelectCommand.
command.Parameters.Add("@Country", SqlDbType.NVarChar, 15);
command.Parameters.Add("@City", SqlDbType.NVarChar, 15);
adapter.SelectCommand = command;
// Create the InsertCommand.
command = new SqlCommand(
"INSERT INTO Customers (CustomerID, CompanyName) " +
"VALUES (@CustomerID, @CompanyName)", connection);
// Add the parameters for the InsertCommand.
command.Parameters.Add("@CustomerID", SqlDbType.NChar, 5, "CustomerID");
command.Parameters.Add("@CompanyName", SqlDbType.NVarChar, 40, "CompanyName");
adapter.InsertCommand = command;
// Create the UpdateCommand.
command = new SqlCommand(
"UPDATE Customers SET CustomerID = @CustomerID, CompanyName = @CompanyName " +
"WHERE CustomerID = @oldCustomerID", connection);
// Add the parameters for the UpdateCommand.
command.Parameters.Add("@CustomerID", SqlDbType.NChar, 5, "CustomerID");
command.Parameters.Add("@CompanyName", SqlDbType.NVarChar, 40, "CompanyName");
SqlParameter parameter = command.Parameters.Add(
"@oldCustomerID", SqlDbType.NChar, 5, "CustomerID");
parameter.SourceVersion = DataRowVersion.Original;
adapter.UpdateCommand = command;
// Create the DeleteCommand.
command = new SqlCommand(
"DELETE FROM Customers WHERE CustomerID = @CustomerID", connection);
// Add the parameters for the DeleteCommand.
parameter = command.Parameters.Add(
"@CustomerID", SqlDbType.NChar, 5, "CustomerID");
parameter.SourceVersion = DataRowVersion.Original;
adapter.DeleteCommand = command;
return adapter;
}
}
Remarks
During Update, if this property is not set and primary key information is present in the DataSet, the DeleteCommand can be generated automatically if you set the SelectCommand property and use the SqlCommandBuilder. Then, any additional commands that you do not set are generated by the SqlCommandBuilder. This generation logic requires key column information to be present in the DataSet. For more information, see Generating Commands with CommandBuilders.
When DeleteCommand is assigned to a previously created SqlCommand, the SqlCommand is not cloned. The DeleteCommand maintains a reference to the previously created SqlCommand object.
For every column that you propagate to the data source on Update, a parameter should be added to the InsertCommand
, UpdateCommand
, or DeleteCommand
. The SourceColumn
property of the parameter should be set to the name of the column. This indicates that the value of the parameter is not set manually, but is taken from the particular column in the currently processed row.