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This example demonstrates the Prepared property by opening two Command objects — one prepared and one not prepared.
Public Sub PreparedX() Dim cnn1 As ADODB.Connection Dim cmd1 As ADODB.Command Dim cmd2 As ADODB.Command Dim strCnn As String Dim strCmd As String Dim sngStart As Single Dim sngEnd As Single Dim sngNotPrepared As Single Dim sngPrepared As Single Dim intLoop As Integer ' Open a connection. strCnn = "driver={SQL Server};server=srv;" & _ "uid=sa;pwd=;database=pubs" Set cnn1 = New ADODB.Connection cnn1.Open strCnn ' Create two command objects for the same ' command -- one prepared and one not prepared. strCmd = "SELECT title, type FROM titles ORDER BY type" Set cmd1 = New ADODB.Command Set cmd1.ActiveConnection = cnn1 cmd1.CommandText = strCmd Set cmd2 = New ADODB.Command Set cmd2.ActiveConnection = cnn1 cmd2.CommandText = strCmd cmd2.Prepared = True ' Set a timer, then execute the unprepared ' command 20 times. sngStart = Timer For intLoop = 1 To 20 cmd1.Execute Next intLoop sngEnd = Timer sngNotPrepared = sngEnd - sngStart ' Reset the timer, then execute the prepared ' command 20 times. sngStart = Timer For intLoop = 1 To 20 cmd2.Execute Next intLoop sngEnd = Timer sngPrepared = sngEnd - sngStart ' Display performance results. MsgBox "Performance Results:" & vbCr & _ " Not Prepared: " & Format(sngNotPrepared, _ "##0.000") & " seconds" & vbCr & _ " Prepared: " & Format(sngPrepared, _ "##0.000") & " seconds" cnn1.Close End Sub
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