SqlTypes and the DataSet 

ADO.NET 2.0 includes enhanced support for System.Data.SqlTypes in the DataSet. In addition to using the Common Language Runtime (CLR) data types in the System namespace, the data type of a DataColumn can be set to one of the System.Data.SqlTypes.

Working with SqlTypes

Using System.Data.SqlTypes directly in a DataSet confers several benefits when working SQL Server data types. System.Data.SqlTypes supports the same semantics as SQL Server native data types. Using System.Data.SqlTypes also eliminates loss of precision that can occur when converting decimal or numeric data types.

Example

The following code creates a DataTable object, explicitly defining the DataColumn data types using System.Data.SqlTypes instead of CLR types. The code fills the DataTable with data from the Sales.SalesOrderDetail table in the AdventureWorks database in SQL Server 2005.

Private Sub GetSqlTypesAW(ByVal connectionString As String)

    ' Create a DataTable and specify the
    ' SqlType for each column.
    Dim table As New DataTable()
    Dim icolumnolumn As DataColumn = _
      table.Columns.Add("SalesOrderID", GetType(SqlInt32))
    Dim priceColumn As DataColumn = _
      table.Columns.Add("UnitPrice", GetType(SqlMoney))
    Dim totalColumn As DataColumn = _
      table.Columns.Add("LineTotal", GetType(SqlDecimal))
    Dim columnModifiedDate As DataColumn = _
      table.Columns.Add("ModifiedDate", GetType(SqlDateTime))

    ' Open a connection to SQL Server and fill the DataTable
    ' with data from the Sales.SalesOrderDetail table
    ' in the AdventureWorks sample database.
    Using connection As New SqlConnection(connectionString)

        Dim queryString As String = _
           "SELECT TOP 5 SalesOrderID, UnitPrice, LineTotal, ModifiedDate " _
           & "FROM Sales.SalesOrderDetail WHERE LineTotal < @LineTotal"

        ' Create the SqlCommand.
        Dim command As SqlCommand = New SqlCommand(queryString, connection)

        ' Create the SqlParameter and assign a value.
        Dim parameter As SqlParameter = _
           New SqlParameter("@LineTotal", SqlDbType.Decimal)
        parameter.Value = 1.5
        command.Parameters.Add(parameter)

        ' Open the connection and load the data.
        connection.Open()
        Dim reader As SqlDataReader = _
           command.ExecuteReader(CommandBehavior.CloseConnection)
        table.Load(reader)

        ' Close the SqlDataReader
        reader.Close()
    End Using

    ' Display the SqlType of each column.
    Dim column As DataColumn
    Console.WriteLine("Data Types:")
    For Each column In table.Columns
        Console.WriteLine(" {0} -- {1}", _
        column.ColumnName, column.DataType.UnderlyingSystemType)
    Next column

    ' Display the value for each row.
    Dim row As DataRow
    Console.WriteLine("Values:")
    For Each row In table.Rows
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row("SalesOrderID"))
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row("UnitPrice"))
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row("LineTotal"))
        Console.Write(" {0} ", row("ModifiedDate"))
        Console.WriteLine()
    Next row
End Sub
static private void GetSqlTypesAW(string connectionString)
{
    // Create a DataTable and specify a SqlType
    // for each column.
    DataTable table = new DataTable();
    DataColumn icolumnolumn =
        table.Columns.Add("SalesOrderID", typeof(SqlInt32));
    DataColumn priceColumn =
        table.Columns.Add("UnitPrice", typeof(SqlMoney));
    DataColumn totalColumn =
        table.Columns.Add("LineTotal", typeof(SqlDecimal));
    DataColumn columnModifiedDate =
        table.Columns.Add("ModifiedDate", typeof(SqlDateTime));

    // Open a connection to SQL Server and fill the DataTable
    // with data from the Sales.SalesOrderDetail table
    // in the AdventureWorks sample database.
    using (SqlConnection connection = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
    {
        string queryString =
            "SELECT TOP 5 SalesOrderID, UnitPrice, LineTotal, ModifiedDate "
            + "FROM Sales.SalesOrderDetail WHERE LineTotal < @LineTotal";

        // Create the SqlCommand.
        SqlCommand command = new SqlCommand(queryString, connection);

        // Create the SqlParameter and assign a value.
        SqlParameter parameter =
            new SqlParameter("@LineTotal", SqlDbType.Decimal);
        parameter.Value = 1.5;
        command.Parameters.Add(parameter);

        // Open the connection and load the data.
        connection.Open();
        SqlDataReader reader =
            command.ExecuteReader(CommandBehavior.CloseConnection);
        table.Load(reader);

        // Close the SqlDataReader.
        reader.Close();
    }

    // Display the SqlType of each column.
    Console.WriteLine("Data Types:");
    foreach (DataColumn column in table.Columns)
    {
        Console.WriteLine(" {0} -- {1}",
            column.ColumnName, column.DataType.UnderlyingSystemType);
    }

    // Display the value for each row.
    Console.WriteLine("Values:");
    foreach (DataRow row in table.Rows)
    {
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row["SalesOrderID"]);
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row["UnitPrice"]);
        Console.Write(" {0}, ", row["LineTotal"]);
        Console.Write(" {0} ", row["ModifiedDate"]);
        Console.WriteLine();
    }
}

The output displayed in the console window shows the data type of each column, and the values retrieved from SQL Server.

See Also

Other Resources

Working with SqlTypes