ADO.NET Provider for Salesforce Marketing Cloud Account Engagement

Build 24.0.9060

DELETE Statements

To delete information from a table, use DELETE statements.

DELETE Syntax

The DELETE statement requires the table name in the FROM clause and the row's primary key in the WHERE clause, as shown in the following example:

<delete_statement> ::= DELETE FROM <table_name> WHERE { Id = <expression> } [ { AND | OR } ... ]

<expression> ::=
  | @ <parameter> 
  | ?
  | <literal>

You can use the ExecuteNonQuery method to execute data manipulation commands and retrieve the number of affected rows, as shown in the following example:

C#

String connectionString = "InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH;BusinessUnitID=YourBusinessId;";
using (SalesforcePardotConnection connection = new SalesforcePardotConnection(connectionString)) {
  int rowsAffected;
  SalesforcePardotCommand cmd = new SalesforcePardotCommand("DELETE FROM Prospects WHERE Id = @myId", connection);
  cmd.Parameters.Add(new SalesforcePardotParameter("myId","600"));
  rowsAffected = cmd.ExecuteNonQuery();
}

VB.NET

  
Dim connectionString As [String] = "InitiateOAuth=GETANDREFRESH;BusinessUnitID=YourBusinessId;"
Using connection As New SalesforcePardotConnection(connectionString)
  Dim rowsAffected As Integer
  Dim cmd As New SalesforcePardotCommand("DELETE FROM Prospects WHERE Id = @myId", connection)
  cmd.Parameters.Add(New SalesforcePardotParameter("myId", "600"))
  rowsAffected = cmd.ExecuteNonQuery()
End Using

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Build 24.0.9060