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Home/ Questions/Q 9134021
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 17, 20262026-06-17T08:35:18+00:00 2026-06-17T08:35:18+00:00

I’m coding a transaction manually in ADO.NET. The example I’m working from reuses the

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I’m coding a transaction manually in ADO.NET. The example I’m working from reuses the SqlCommand which seem like a fine idea.

However, I have added parameters to my command.

My question is: in the following code, is command.Parameters.Clear() correct? Or am I doing it wrong?

using (var connection = new SqlConnection(EomAppCommon.EomAppSettings.ConnStr))
{
    connection.Open();
    SqlTransaction transaction = connection.BeginTransaction();
    SqlCommand command = connection.CreateCommand();
    command.Transaction = transaction;
    try
    {
        foreach (var itemIDs in this.SelectedItemIds)
        {
            command.CommandText = "UPDATE Item SET payment_method_id = @batchID WHERE id in (@itemIDs)";
            // IS THE FOLLOWING CORRECT?
            command.Parameters.Clear();

            command.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@batchID", batchID));
            command.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@itemIDs", itemIDs));
            command.ExecuteNonQuery();
        }
        transaction.Commit();
    }
    catch (Exception ex)
    {
        MessageBox.Show("Failed to update payment batches, rolling back." + ex.Message);
        try
        {
            transaction.Rollback();
        }
        catch (Exception exRollback)
        {
            if (!(exRollback is InvalidOperationException)) // connection closed or transaction already rolled back on the server.
            {
                MessageBox.Show("Failed to roll back. " + exRollback.Message);
            }
        }
    }
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-17T08:35:19+00:00Added an answer on June 17, 2026 at 8:35 am

    Since you’re repeatedly executing the same query, it’s unnecessary to clear them – you can add the parameters outside the loop and just fill them inside.

    try
    {
        command.CommandText = "UPDATE Item SET payment_method_id = @batchID WHERE id in (@itemIDs)";
        command.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@batchID", 0));
        command.Parameters.Add(new SqlParameter("@itemIDs", ""));
    
        foreach (var itemIDs in this.SelectedItemIds)
        {
            command.Parameters["@batchID"].Value = batchID;
            command.Parameters["@itemIDs"].Value = itemIDs;
            command.ExecuteNonQuery();
        }
        transaction.Commit();
    }
    

    Note – you can’t use parameters with IN as you’ve got here – it won’t work.

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