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SqlCommand.ExecuteNonQuery Method

Definition

Executes a Transact-SQL statement against the connection and returns the number of rows affected.

public:
 override int ExecuteNonQuery();
public:
 virtual int ExecuteNonQuery();
public override int ExecuteNonQuery ();
public int ExecuteNonQuery ();
override this.ExecuteNonQuery : unit -> int
abstract member ExecuteNonQuery : unit -> int
override this.ExecuteNonQuery : unit -> int
Public Overrides Function ExecuteNonQuery () As Integer
Public Function ExecuteNonQuery () As Integer

Returns

The number of rows affected.

Implements

Exceptions

A SqlDbType other than Binary or VarBinary was used when Value was set to Stream. For more information about streaming, see SqlClient Streaming Support.

-or-

A SqlDbType other than Char, NChar, NVarChar, VarChar, or Xml was used when Value was set to TextReader.

-or-

A SqlDbType other than Xml was used when Value was set to XmlReader.

An exception occurred while executing the command against a locked row. This exception is not generated when you are using Microsoft .NET Framework version 1.0.

-or-

A timeout occurred during a streaming operation. For more information about streaming, see SqlClient Streaming Support.

An error occurred in a Stream, XmlReader or TextReader object during a streaming operation. For more information about streaming, see SqlClient Streaming Support.

The SqlConnection closed or dropped during a streaming operation. For more information about streaming, see SqlClient Streaming Support.

The Stream, XmlReader or TextReader object was closed during a streaming operation. For more information about streaming, see SqlClient Streaming Support.

Examples

The following example creates a SqlCommand and then executes it using ExecuteNonQuery. The example is passed a string that is a Transact-SQL statement (such as UPDATE, INSERT, or DELETE) and a string to use to connect to the data source.

private static void CreateCommand(string queryString,
    string connectionString)
{
    using (SqlConnection connection = new SqlConnection(
               connectionString))
    {
        SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(queryString, connection);
        command.Connection.Open();
        command.ExecuteNonQuery();
    }
}
Public Sub CreateCommand(ByVal queryString As String, _
  ByVal connectionString As String)
    Using connection As New SqlConnection(connectionString)
        Dim command As New SqlCommand(queryString, connection)
        command.Connection.Open()
        command.ExecuteNonQuery()
    End Using
End Sub

Remarks

You can use the ExecuteNonQuery to perform catalog operations (for example, querying the structure of a database or creating database objects such as tables), or to change the data in a database without using a DataSet by executing UPDATE, INSERT, or DELETE statements.

Although the ExecuteNonQuery returns no rows, any output parameters or return values mapped to parameters are populated with data.

For UPDATE, INSERT, and DELETE statements, the return value is the number of rows affected by the command. For all other types of statements, the return value is -1.

When a trigger exists on a table being inserted or updated, the return value includes the number of rows affected by both the insert or update operation and the number of rows affected by the trigger or triggers.

When SET NOCOUNT ON is set on the connection (before or as part of executing the command, or as part of a trigger initiated by the execution of the command) the rows affected by individual statements stop contributing to the count of rows affected that is returned by this method.

If no statements are detected that contribute to the count, the return value is -1. If a rollback occurs, the return value is also -1.

Applies to

See also