Updating UDT Columns with DataAdapters
User-defined types (UDTs) are supported by using a System.Data.DataSet and a System.Data.SqlClient.SqlDataAdapter to retrieve and modify data.
Populating a Dataset
You can use a Transact-SQL SELECT statement to select UDT column values to populate a dataset using a data adapter. The following example assumes that you have a Points table defined with the following structure and some sample data. The following Transact-SQL statements create the Points table and insert a few rows.
CREATE TABLE dbo.Points (id int PRIMARY Key, p Point);
INSERT INTO dbo.Points VALUES (1, CONVERT(Point, '1,3'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points VALUES (2, CONVERT(Point, '2,4'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points VALUES (3, CONVERT(Point, '3,5'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points VALUES (4, CONVERT(Point, '4,6'));
GO
The following ADO.NET code fragment retrieves a valid connection string, creates a new SqlDataAdapter, and populates a System.Data.DataTable with the rows of data from the Points table.
Dim da As New SqlDataAdapter( _
"SELECT id, p FROM dbo.Points", connectionString)
Dim datTable As New DataTable("Points")
da.Fill(datTable)
SqlDataAdapter da = new SqlDataAdapter(
"SELECT id, p FROM dbo.Points", connectionString);
DataTable datTable = new DataTable("Points");
da.Fill(datTable);
Updating UDT Data in a Dataset
You can use two methods to update a UDT column in a DataSet:
- Provide custom InsertCommand, UpdateCommand and DeleteCommand objects for a SqlDataAdapter object.
- Use the command builder (System.Data.SqlClient.SqlCommandBuilder) to create automatically the INSERT, UPDATE, and DELETE commands for you. In order to have conflict detection, add a timestamp column (alias rowversion) to the SQL Server table that contains the UDT. The timestamp data type allows you to version-stamp the rows in a table, and is guaranteed to be unique within a database. When a value in the table is changed, SQL Server automatically updates the eight-byte binary number for the row affected by the change.
Note that the SqlCommandBuilder does not consider the UDT for conflict detection unless there is a timestamp column in the underlying table. UDTs may or may not be comparable, so they are not included in the WHERE clause when the "compare original values" option is used to generate a command.
Example
The following example requires the creation of a second table containing the Point UDT column as well as a timestamp column. Both tables are used to illustrate how to create custom command objects to update data, and how to update using a timestamp column. Run the following Transact-SQL statements to create the second table and populate it with sample data.
CREATE TABLE dbo.Points_ts (id int PRIMARY KEY, p Point, ts timestamp);
INSERT INTO dbo.Points_ts (id, p) VALUES (1, CONVERT(Point, '1,3'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points_ts (id, p) VALUES (2, CONVERT(Point, '2,4'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points_ts (id, p) VALUES (3, CONVERT(Point, '3,5'));
INSERT INTO dbo.Points_ts (id, p) VALUES (4, CONVERT(Point, '4,6'));
The following ADO.NET example has two methods:
- UserProvidedCommands, which demonstrates how to supply InsertCommand, UpdateCommand, and DeleteCommand objects for updating the Point UDT in the Points table (which does not contain a timestamp column).
- CommandBuilder, which demonstrates how to use a SqlCommandBuilder in the Points_ts table that contains the timestamp column.
Imports System
Imports System.Data
Imports System.Data.SqlClient
Module Module1
' Retrieves the connection string
Private connString As String = GetConnectionString()
Sub Main()
UserProvidedCommands()
CommandBuilder()
End Sub
Private Sub UserProvidedCommands()
' Create a new SqlDataAdapter
Dim da As New SqlDataAdapter( _
"SELECT id, p FROM dbo.Points", connString)
' Setup the INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE commands
Dim idParam As SqlParameter
Dim pointParam As SqlParameter
da.InsertCommand = New SqlCommand( _
"INSERT INTO dbo.Points (id, p) VALUES (@id, @p)", _
da.SelectCommand.Connection)
idParam = da.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add( _
"@id", SqlDbType.Int)
idParam.SourceColumn = "id"
pointParam = da.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add( _
"@p", SqlDbType.Udt)
pointParam.SourceColumn = "p"
pointParam.UdtTypeName = "dbo.Point"
da.UpdateCommand = New SqlCommand( _
"UPDATE dbo.Points SET p = @p WHERE id = @id", _
da.SelectCommand.Connection)
idParam = _
da.UpdateCommand.Parameters.Add("@id", SqlDbType.Int)
idParam.SourceColumn = "id"
pointParam = da.UpdateCommand.Parameters.Add( _
"@p", SqlDbType.Udt)
pointParam.SourceColumn = "p"
pointParam.UdtTypeName = "dbo.Point"
da.DeleteCommand = New SqlCommand( _
"DELETE dbo.Points WHERE id = @id", _
da.SelectCommand.Connection)
idParam = da.DeleteCommand.Parameters.Add( _
"@id", SqlDbType.Int)
idParam.SourceColumn = "id"
' Fill the DataTable with UDT rows
Dim datTable As New DataTable("Points")
da.Fill(datTable)
' Display the contents of the p (Point) column
Dim r As DataRow
For Each r In datTable.Rows
Dim p As Point = CType(r(1), Point)
Console.WriteLine( _
"ID: {0}, x={1}, y={1}", r(0), p.X, p.Y)
Next r
' Update a row if the DataTable has at least 1 row
If datTable.Rows.Count > 0 Then
Dim oldPoint As Point = _
CType(datTable.Rows(0)(1), Point)
datTable.Rows(0)(1) = _
New Point(oldPoint.X + 1, oldPoint.Y + 1)
End If
' Delete the last row
If datTable.Rows.Count > 0 Then
' If we have at least 1 row
datTable.Rows(1).Delete()
End If
' Insert a row. This will fail if run twice
' because 100 is a primary key value.
datTable.Rows.Add(100, New Point(100, 200))
' Send the changes back to the database
da.Update(datTable)
End Sub
Private Sub CommandBuilder()
' Create a new SqlDataAdapter
Dim da As New SqlDataAdapter( _
"SELECT id, ts, p FROM dbo.Points_ts", connString)
' Select a few rows with UDTs from the database
Dim datTable As New DataTable("Points")
da.Fill(datTable)
' Display the contents of the p (Point) column
Dim r As DataRow
For Each r In datTable.Rows
Dim p As Point = CType(r(2), Point)
Console.WriteLine( _
"ID: {0}, x={1}, y={1}", r(0), p.X, p.Y)
Next r
' Update a row if DataTable has at least 1 row
If datTable.Rows.Count > 0 Then
Dim oldPoint As Point = _
CType(datTable.Rows(0)(2), Point)
datTable.Rows(0)(2) = _
New Point(oldPoint.X + 1, oldPoint.Y + 1)
End If
' Delete the last row
If datTable.Rows.Count > 0 Then
' if we have at least 1 row
datTable.Rows(1).Delete()
End If
' Insert a row. This will fail if run twice
' because 100 is a primary key value
datTable.Rows.Add(100, Nothing, New Point(100, 200))
' Use the CommandBuilder to generate DML statements
Dim bld As New SqlCommandBuilder(da)
bld.ConflictDetection = ConflictOptions.CompareRowVersion
' Send the changes back to the database
da.Update(datTable)
End Sub
Private Function GetConnectionString() As String
' To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
' you can retrieve it from a configuration file.
Return "Data Source=(local);Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;" _
& "Integrated Security=SSPI"
End Function
End Module
using System;
using System.Data;
using System.Data.SqlClient;
class Class1
{
// Retrieves the connection string
private string connString = GetConnectionString();
static void Main()
{
UserProvidedCommands();
CommandBuilder();
}
static void UserProvidedCommands()
{
// Create a new SqlDataAdapter
SqlDataAdapter da = new SqlDataAdapter(
"SELECT id, p FROM dbo.Points", connString);
// Setup the INSERT/UPDATE/DELETE commands
SqlParameter idParam;
SqlParameter pointParam;
da.InsertCommand = new SqlCommand(
"INSERT INTO dbo.Points (id, p) VALUES (@id, @p)",
da.SelectCommand.Connection);
idParam =
da.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@id", SqlDbType.Int);
idParam.SourceColumn = "id";
pointParam =
da.InsertCommand.Parameters.Add("@p", SqlDbType.Udt);
pointParam.SourceColumn = "p";
pointParam.UdtTypeName = "dbo.Point";
da.UpdateCommand = new SqlCommand(
"UPDATE dbo.Points SET p = @p WHERE id = @id",
da.SelectCommand.Connection);
idParam =
da.UpdateCommand.Parameters.Add("@id", SqlDbType.Int);
idParam.SourceColumn = "id";
pointParam =
da.UpdateCommand.Parameters.Add("@p", SqlDbType.Udt);
pointParam.SourceColumn = "p";
pointParam.UdtTypeName = "dbo.Point";
da.DeleteCommand = new SqlCommand(
"DELETE dbo.Points WHERE id = @id",
da.SelectCommand.Connection);
idParam =
da.DeleteCommand.Parameters.Add("@id", SqlDbType.Int);
idParam.SourceColumn = "id";
// Fill the DataTable with UDT rows
DataTable datTable = new DataTable("Points");
da.Fill(datTable);
// Display the contents of the p (Point) column
foreach(DataRow r in datTable.Rows)
{
Point p = (Point)r[1];
Console.WriteLine(
"ID: {0}, x={1}, y={1}", r[0], p.X, p.Y);
}
// Update a row if the DataTable has at least 1 row
if(datTable.Rows.Count > 0 )
{
Point oldPoint = (Point)datTable.Rows[0][1];
datTable.Rows[0][1] =
new Point(oldPoint.X+1, oldPoint.Y+1);
}
// Delete the last row
if(datTable.Rows.Count > 0 )
{ // If we have at least 1 row
datTable.Rows[1].Delete();
}
// Insert a row. This will fail if run twice
// because 100 is a primary key value.
datTable.Rows.Add(100, new Point(100, 200));
// Send the changes back to the database
da.Update(datTable);
}
static void CommandBuilder()
{
// Create a new SqlDataAdapter
SqlDataAdapter da = new SqlDataAdapter(
"SELECT id, ts, p FROM dbo.Points_ts", connString);
// Select a few rows with UDTs from the database
DataTable datTable = new DataTable("Points");
da.Fill(datTable);
// Display the contents of the p (Point) column
foreach (DataRow r in datTable.Rows)
{
Point p = (Point)r[2];
Console.WriteLine(
"ID: {0}, x={1}, y={1}", r[0], p.X, p.Y);
}
// Update a row if DataTable has at least 1 row
if (datTable.Rows.Count > 0)
{
Point oldPoint = (Point)datTable.Rows[0][2];
datTable.Rows[0][2] =
new Point(oldPoint.X + 1, oldPoint.Y + 1);
}
// Delete the last row
if (datTable.Rows.Count > 0)
{ // if we have at least 1 row
datTable.Rows[1].Delete();
}
// Insert a row. This will fail if run twice
// because 100 is a primary key value
datTable.Rows.Add(100, null, new Point(100, 200));
// Use the CommandBuilder to generate DML statements
SqlCommandBuilder bld = new SqlCommandBuilder(da);
bld.ConflictDetection = ConflictOptions.CompareRowVersion;
// Send the changes back to the database
da.Update(datTable);
}
static private string GetConnectionString()
{
// To avoid storing the connection string in your code,
// you can retrieve it from a configuration file.
return "Data Source=localhost;Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks;"
+ "Integrated Security=SSPI";
}
}
See Also
Other Resources
Accessing User-Defined Types in ADO.NET