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"Specified cast is not valid" when populating DataTable from OracleDataAdapter.Fill()

I can't seem to find this question anywhere on Google (or StackOverflow), which really surprised me, so I'm putting it on here to help others in the same situation.

I have a SQL query which runs fine on Oracle Sql Developer, but when I run it through C# usingadapter.Fill(table) to get the results, I get Specified cast is not valid errors (System.InvalidCastException).

Here is cut-down version of the C# code:

var resultsTable = new DataTable();

using (var adapter = new OracleDataAdapter(cmd))
{
    var rows = adapter.Fill(resultsTable);  // exception thrown here, but sql runs fine on Sql Dev

    return resultsTable;
}

And here is a simplified version of the SQL:

SELECT acct_no, market_value/mv_total
FROM myTable
WHERE NVL(market_value, 0) != 0
AND NVL(mv_total, 0) != 0

If I remove the division clause, it doesn't error - so it's specific to that. However, both market_value and mv_total are of type Number(19,4) and I can see that the Oracle adapter is expecting a decimal, so what cast is taking place? Why does it work on SqlDev but not in C#?

like image 252
namford Avatar asked May 29 '14 14:05

namford


3 Answers

Answering my own question:

So it seems that the Oracle number type can hold many more decimal places than the C# decimal type and if Oracle is trying to return more than C# can hold, it throws the InvalidCastException.

Solution?

In your sql, round any results that might have too many decimal places to something sensible. So I did this:

SELECT acct_no, ROUND(market_value/mv_total, 8)  -- rounding this division solves the problem
FROM myTable
WHERE NVL(market_value, 0) != 0
AND NVL(mv_total, 0) != 0

And it worked.

The take away is: Incompatibility between Oracle number type and C# decimal. Restrict your Oracle decimal places to avoid the invalid cast exceptions.

Hope this helps someone else!

like image 176
namford Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 13:10

namford


I know this thread is really old.. However I had a similar issue.

The best solution I have to use the Oracle method TO_BINARY_DOUBLE on Oracle Decimal column

like image 8
AAGF Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 15:10

AAGF


I know this has been answered already, but I also found another alternative that I use as well. I used a CAST on the field that was giving me troubles.

Based on OP's SELECT command:

SELECT acct_no, CAST((market_value/mv_total) AS DECIMAL(14,4))  -- CAST to decimal here
FROM myTable
WHERE NVL(market_value, 0) != 0
AND NVL(mv_total, 0) != 0
like image 2
FrankTheTank Avatar answered Oct 19 '22 14:10

FrankTheTank