Once again, the act of composing my thoughts for the question reveals the answer. Specifically, the last sentence where I wrote "one row at a time". I realized I don't really care that it's a datareader, as long as I can enumerate it row by row. That lead me to this:
public IEnumerable<IDataRecord> GetSomeData(string filter)
{
string sql = "SELECT * FROM [SomeTable] WHERE SomeColumn= @Filter";
using (SqlConnection cn = new SqlConnection(GetConnectionString()))
using (SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand(sql, cn))
{
cmd.Parameters.Add("@Filter", SqlDbType.NVarChar, 255).Value = filter;
cn.Open();
using (IDataReader rdr = cmd.ExecuteReader())
{
while (rdr.Read())
{
yield return (IDataRecord)rdr;
}
}
}
}
This will work even better once we move to 3.5 and can start using other linq operators on the results, and I like it because it sets us up to start thinking in terms of a "pipeline" between each layer for queries that return a lot of results.
The down-side is that it will be awkward for readers holding more than one result set, but that is exceedingly rare.
Update
Since I first started playing with this pattern in 2009, I have learned that it's best if I also make it a generic IEnumerable<T>
return type and add a Func<IDataRecord, T>
parameter to convert the DataReader state to business objects in the loop. Otherwise, there can be issues with the lazy iteration, such that you see the last object in the query every time.
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