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Home/ Questions/Q 919747
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T18:35:49+00:00 2026-05-15T18:35:49+00:00

For my database I create a new query and wrote select * from dbname

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For my database I create a new query and wrote

select * from dbname

using SQL Server Management Studio Express 2005. Saved it by name SQLQuery1.sql on the desktop.

Now I would like to call this query from C# code when an ASP.NET button is clicked and display the results in a gridview.

How do I call the query? Can I tell Visual Studio 2008 to please execute the query stored in ‘sqlquery1.sql’ ?

Where do I store the results so that I can bind them the display controls like a gridview, or traverse the data?

This is a website in C#, ASP.NET, Visual Studio 2008, and database is on the same computer using SQL Server 2005 Express

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T18:35:50+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 6:35 pm

    You cannot just execute a SQL script you stored on your computer’s desktop from an ASP.NET website.

    You can either:

    • turn your query into a stored procedure in SQL Server, something like:

      CREATE PROCEDURE dbo.proc_MyQuery
      AS
         SELECT (list of columns) 
         FROM dbo.MyTable
         WHERE (condition)
      

      When you do this, you can create a SqlCommand in your C# code and call that stored procedure and retrieve the results back.

    or:

    • you can execute the query directly from your C# code by creating a SqlConnection and a SqlCommand object and running that SQL statement.

    These are both absolutely basic ADO.NET features – you should find tons of learning resources online for this.

    For instance:

    • ADO.NET 101 – Data Access with ADO.NET
    • ADO.NET 101: SQL Connection
    • ADO.NET 101: SqlCommand / Your guide to using this ADO.NET object to execute SQL Server commands
    • Using ADO.NET for beginners
    • ADO.NET for Beginners – Part 1

    Which ever way you go, you basically need to have a SqlConnection to your database, and then a SqlCommand to execute the query. If you want to store the data so you can both bind it to a Gridview as well as navigate it in code, you probably want to store it in a DataTable. So your code would look something like this:

    DataTable resultTable = new DataTable();
    
    using(SqlConnection con = new SqlConnection("your connection string here"))
    {
        string sqlStmt = "SELECT (columns) FROM dbo.YourTable WHERE (condition)";
    
        using(SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand(sqlStmt, con))
        {
            SqlDataAdapter dap = new SqlDataAdapter(cmd);
            dap.Fill(resultTable);
        }
    }
    

    and then to bind to the gridview, you’d use something like:

    myGridView.DataSource = resultTable;
    myGridView.DataBind();
    

    and to navigate the DataTable, you can step through its .Rows() collection of data rows.

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