SqlParameter.Precision 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 the maximum number of digits used to represent the Value property.
public:
property System::Byte Precision { System::Byte get(); void set(System::Byte value); };
public byte Precision { get; set; }
[System.Data.DataSysDescription("DbDataParameter_Precision")]
public byte Precision { get; set; }
member this.Precision : byte with get, set
[<System.Data.DataSysDescription("DbDataParameter_Precision")>]
member this.Precision : byte with get, set
Public Property Precision As Byte
Property Value
The maximum number of digits used to represent the Value property. The default value is 0. This indicates that the data provider sets the precision for Value.
Implements
- Attributes
Examples
The following example creates a SqlParameter and sets some of its properties.
private static void AddSqlParameter(SqlCommand command)
{
SqlParameter parameter = new SqlParameter("@Price", SqlDbType.Decimal);
parameter.Value = 3.1416;
parameter.Precision = 8;
parameter.Scale = 4;
command.Parameters.Add(parameter);
}
Private Sub AddSqlParameter(ByVal command As SqlCommand)
Dim parameter As New SqlParameter("@Price", SqlDbType.Decimal)
With parameter
.Value = 3.1416
.Precision = 8
.Scale = 4
End With
command.Parameters.Add(parameter)
End Sub
Remarks
The Precision property is used by parameters that have a SqlDbType of Decimal
.
You do not need to specify values for the Precision and Scale properties for input parameters, as they can be inferred from the parameter value. Precision
and Scale
are required for output parameters and for scenarios where you need to specify complete metadata for a parameter without indicating a value, such as specifying a null value with a specific precision and scale.
Note
Use of this property to coerce data passed to the database is not supported. To round, truncate, or otherwise coerce data before passing it to the database, use the Math class that is part of the System
namespace prior to assigning a value to the parameter's Value
property.
Note
Microsoft .NET Framework data providers that are included with the .NET Framework version 1.0 do not verify the Precision or Scale of Decimal parameter values. This can cause truncated data being inserted at the data source. If you are using .NET Framework version 1.0, validate the Precision and Scale of Decimal values before setting the parameter value. When you use .NET Framework version 1.1 or a later version, an exception is thrown if a Decimal parameter value is set with an invalid Precision. Scale values that exceed the Decimal parameter scale are still truncated.