Hello:

> For this time, it's hardcoded in provider code. The '@' character is
> default fo ADO.NET classes, so if oracle is using another, it's weird.

That isn't 100% true :) Really the parameter prefix is provider 
dependedant ( depends on the RDBMS ), in the Firebird .NET Provider the 
@ was used for compatibility resons with Sql Server :) as it's not 
really supported by Firebird.





--
Best regards

Carlos Guzmán Álvarez

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