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What is the right way to populate a DropDownList from a database?

I am populating a DropDownList from a SQL Server database as shown below. It works fine, but I'm not sure it's a good way. Can someone shed some light on this method, and give some improvements?

private void LoadSubjects()
{
    ddlSubjects.Items.Clear();
    string selectSQL = "SELECT SubjectID,SubjectName FROM Students.dbo.Subjects";

    SqlConnection con = new SqlConnection(connectionString);
    SqlCommand cmd = new SqlCommand(selectSQL, con);
    SqlDataReader reader;

    try
    {
        ListItem newItem = new ListItem();
        newItem.Text = "<Select Subject>";
        newItem.Value = "0";
        ddlSubjects.Items.Add(newItem);

        con.Open();
        reader = cmd.ExecuteReader();
        while (reader.Read())
        {
            newItem = new ListItem();
            newItem.Text = reader["SubjectName"].ToString();
            newItem.Value = reader["SubjectID"].ToString();
            ddlSubjects.Items.Add(newItem);
        }
        reader.Close();
    }
    catch (Exception err)
    {
        //TODO
    }
    finally
    {
        con.Close();
    }
}

You could bind the DropDownList to a data source (DataTable, List, DataSet, SqlDataSource, etc).

For example, if you wanted to use a DataTable:

ddlSubject.DataSource = subjectsTable;
ddlSubject.DataTextField = "SubjectNamne";
ddlSubject.DataValueField = "SubjectID";
ddlSubject.DataBind();

EDIT - More complete example

private void LoadSubjects()
{

    DataTable subjects = new DataTable();

    using (SqlConnection con = new SqlConnection(connectionString))
    {

        try
        {
            SqlDataAdapter adapter = new SqlDataAdapter("SELECT SubjectID, SubjectName FROM Students.dbo.Subjects", con);
            adapter.Fill(subjects);

            ddlSubject.DataSource = subjects;
            ddlSubject.DataTextField = "SubjectNamne";
            ddlSubject.DataValueField = "SubjectID";
            ddlSubject.DataBind();
        }
        catch (Exception ex)
        {
            // Handle the error
        }

    }

    // Add the initial item - you can add this even if the options from the
    // db were not successfully loaded
    ddlSubject.Items.Insert(0, new ListItem("<Select Subject>", "0"));

}

To set an initial value via the markup, rather than code-behind, specify the option(s) and set the AppendDataBoundItems attribute to true:

<asp:DropDownList ID="ddlSubject" runat="server" AppendDataBoundItems="true">
    <asp:ListItem Text="<Select Subject>" Value="0" />
</asp:DropDownList>

You could then bind the DropDownList to a DataSource in the code-behind (just remember to remove:

ddlSubject.Items.Insert(0, new ListItem("<Select Subject>", "0"));

from the code-behind, or you'll have two "" items.

I hope I am not overstating the obvious, but why not do it directly in the ASP side? Unless you are dynamically altering the SQL based on certain conditions in your program, you should avoid codebehind as much as possible.

You could do the above all in ASP directly without code using the SqlDataSource control and a property in your dropdownlist.

<asp:GridView ID="gvSubjects" runat="server" DataKeyNames="SubjectID" OnRowDataBound="GridView_RowDataBound" OnDataBound="GridView_DataBound">
    <Columns>
        <asp:TemplateField HeaderText="Subjects">
            <ItemTemplate>
                <asp:DropDownList ID="ddlSubjects" runat="server" DataSourceID="sdsSubjects" DataTextField="SubjectName" DataValueField="SubjectID">
                </asp:DropDownList>
                <asp:SqlDataSource ID="sdsSubjects" runat="server"
                    SelectCommand="SELECT SubjectID,SubjectName FROM Students.dbo.Subjects"></asp:SqlDataSource>
            </ItemTemplate>
        </asp:TemplateField>
    </Columns>
</asp:GridView>
public void getClientNameDropDowndata()
{
    getConnection = Connection.SetConnection(); // to connect with data base Configure manager
    string ClientName = "Select  ClientName from Client ";
    SqlCommand ClientNameCommand = new SqlCommand(ClientName, getConnection);
    ClientNameCommand.CommandType = CommandType.Text;
    SqlDataReader ClientNameData;
    ClientNameData = ClientNameCommand.ExecuteReader();
    if (ClientNameData.HasRows)
    {
        DropDownList_ClientName.DataSource = ClientNameData;
        DropDownList_ClientName.DataValueField = "ClientName";
        DropDownList_ClientName.DataTextField="ClientName";
        DropDownList_ClientName.DataBind();
    }
    else
    {
        MessageBox.Show("No is found");
        CloseConnection = new Connection();
        CloseConnection.closeConnection(); // close the connection 
    }
}
((TextBox)GridView1.Rows[e.NewEditIndex].Cells[3].Controls[0]).Enabled = false;

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