Stored Procedures: Returning DataBy Bill Graziano on 9 April 2001 | Tags: Stored Procedures This article discusses three common ways to return data from stored procedures: returning result sets (SELECT statements), using output variables and using the RETURN statement. Each example includes client-side code (ASP.NET) and server-side code (T-SQL) to read the results. (This article has been updated through SQL Server 2005.) All the examples in this article use the AdventureWorks database and have been tested through SQL Server 2008. All the client code examples are written using ASP.NET 2.0. Result SetsResult sets are what you get when you run a simple SELECT statement inside a stored procedure. Let's suppose you want a stored procedure to return a list of all the people with a given last name. The code for the stored procedure might look like this: CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.GetPeopleByLastName (@LastName NVARCHAR(50)) AS SELECT ContactID, FirstName, LastName FROM Person.Contact WHERE LastName = @LastName ORDER BY ContactID If you just execute this stored procedure in SQL Server Management Studio you get a result set that looks like this: EXEC dbo.GetPeopleByLastName @LastName = 'Alexander' - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - ContactID FirstName LastName ----------- ----------------------------------- ----------------------- 22 J. Phillip Alexander 23 Michelle Alexander 430 Mary Alexander . . . { hiding a bunch of rows } . . . 19942 Morgan Alexander (123 row(s) affected) If you want to write a web page that calls this stored procedure and processes the results that code you'll need to add a using clause for the SqlClient namespace. This is needed for all the client side samples. using System.Data.SqlClient;
The code itself might look like this: // Your code should get the connection string from web.config string connectionString = @"Server=L40\YUKON; Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks; Integrated Security=True;"; using (SqlConnection conn = new SqlConnection(connectionString)) { using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("dbo.GetPeopleByLastName")) { cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure; cmd.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@LastName", "Alexander")); conn.Open(); cmd.Connection = conn; using (SqlDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader(CommandBehavior.CloseConnection)) { while (rdr.Read()) { int contactID = rdr.GetInt32(rdr.GetOrdinal("ContactID")); string firstName = rdr.GetString(rdr.GetOrdinal("FirstName")); Response.Write(firstName + " (" + contactID.ToString() + ")"); } rdr.Close(); } } } If you want to capture this result set using T-SQL you'll need a place to store it. Temporary Tables work well for that. That code might look something like this: DECLARE @People TABLE ( ContactID INT, FirstName NVARCHAR(50), LastName NVARCHAR(50) ) INSERT @People (ContactID, FirstName, LastName) EXEC dbo.GetPeopleByLastName @LastName = 'Alexander' SELECT COUNT(*) FROM @People GO - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - (123 row(s) affected) ----------- 123 (1 row(s) affected) This code let's us capture the result set from the stored procedure into a table variable or temporary table. I use code like this when I work with packaged applications. I call their stored procedures to get the results I want and then manipulate it as needed. Using OUTPUT variablesIf you just want to return a single value (or a couple of values) you can use output variables. The stored procedure looks like this: CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.GetCountByLastName ( @LastName NVARCHAR(50), @LastNameCount INT OUTPUT ) AS SELECT @LastNameCount = COUNT(*) FROM Person.Contact WHERE LastName = @LastName If we want to return the value using T-SQL we'd use code like this: DECLARE @TheCount INT EXEC dbo.GetCountByLastName @LastName = 'Alexander', @LastNameCount = @TheCount OUTPUT SELECT TheCount = @TheCount GO - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - TheCount ----------- 123 (1 row(s) affected) And we can see that there are still 123 Alexanders in our database. To call run this stored procedure from ASP.NET we'd need code that looked like this: // Your code should get the connection string from web.config string connectionString = @"Server=L40\YUKON; Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks; Integrated Security=True;"; using (SqlConnection conn = new SqlConnection(connectionString)) { using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("dbo.GetCountByLastName")) { cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure; cmd.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@LastName", "Alexander")); SqlParameter countParameter = new SqlParameter("@LastNameCount", 0); countParameter.Direction = ParameterDirection.Output; cmd.Parameters.Add(countParameter); conn.Open(); cmd.Connection = conn; cmd.ExecuteNonQuery(); int count = Int32.Parse(cmd.Parameters["@LastNameCount"].Value.ToString()); Response.Write("<p>Count: " + count.ToString()); conn.Close(); } } Using ReturnThe last way to get data back from a stored procedure is also the most limiting. It only returns a single numeric value. This is most commonly used to return a status result or error code from a procedure. Consider this procedure: CREATE PROC dbo.TestReturn (@InValue int) AS Return @Invalue GO All it does is use the RETURN statement to send back the value that was passed in.
Note that executing a RETURN statement causes a stored procedure to stop executing and
return control back to the calling program. This is often used to test for error conditions
and stop processing if one is found. The following script calls the DECLARE @ReturnValue INT EXEC @ReturnValue = TestReturn 3 SELECT ReturnValue=@ReturnValue and the output looks like this: ReturnValue ----------- 3 (1 row(s) affected) Whatever number is returned using the RETURN statement is put into the variable @ReturnValue. The ASP.NET code to get the return value looks like this: // Your code should get the connection string from web.config string connectionString = @"Server=L40\YUKON; Initial Catalog=AdventureWorks; Integrated Security=True;"; using (SqlConnection conn = new SqlConnection(connectionString)) { using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand("dbo.TestReturn")) { cmd.CommandType = CommandType.StoredProcedure; cmd.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@Invalue", 3)); SqlParameter returnValue = new SqlParameter("@Return_Value", DbType.Int32); returnValue.Direction = ParameterDirection.ReturnValue; cmd.Parameters.Add(returnValue); conn.Open(); cmd.Connection = conn; cmd.ExecuteNonQuery(); int count = Int32.Parse(cmd.Parameters["@Return_Value"].Value.ToString()); Response.Write("<p>Return Code: " + count.ToString()); conn.Close(); } } Those are the three best ways I know of to get data back from a stored procedure. Enjoy!
|
- Advertisement - |