Difference between revisions of "PHP199"

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</pre>
 
</pre>
  
/MJ
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--[[User:0520797|0520797]] 12:28, 3 February 2007 (UTC)
  
 
== Viewing contents of array ==
 
== Viewing contents of array ==

Revision as of 12:28, 3 February 2007

Finding the number of rows returned

This is a small tip I haven't seen on the Wiki which shows you how to find the number of rows return from your MySQL queryies. The function mysql_num_rows() is the one to look for.

Example

<?
// Database connection here...

$sql = "SELECT title,author FROM comics';

$res = mysql_query($sql);

$total = mysql_num_rows($res);

if ($total == 0) {
  echo 'No rows were returned';
} elseif ($total == 1) {
  echo '1 row was returned';
} else {
  echo $total . ' rows were returned';
}
?>

--0520797 12:28, 3 February 2007 (UTC)

Viewing contents of array

A good tip for checking the information returned from the database is to use <pre> and print_r() which outputs arrays in a more readable form...

Example

Presuming the following SQL was used on the comics database...

SELECT title,author FROM comics LIMIT 1

This would return the title and author details for the first record in the table.

If you then used mysql_fetch_array() to return the details as an array and output it's contents wrapped in <pre> you get a nicely formatted view of the array and it's contents.

<?
// Database connection here...

$sql = "SELECT title,author FROM comics LIMIT 1';

$res = mysql_query($sql);

$row = mysql_fetch_assoc($res);

echo '<pre>'; print_r($row); echo '<pre>';

?>

Would print the following...

Array
(
    [title] => Elfquest
    [author] => Richard/Pini (Wendi)
)

Can be especially useful when using multidimensional arrays, or when you have a lot of fields returned from the database.

/MJ