If your query is successful, PDO::errorInfo() still returns an array. For MySQL 5.x, I get the following...
Array
(
[0] => 00000
[1] =>
[2] =>
)
(PHP 5 >= 5.1.0, PHP 7, PHP 8, PECL pdo >= 0.1.0)
PDOStatement::errorInfo — Fetch extended error information associated with the last operation on the statement handle
Questa funzione non contiene parametri.
PDOStatement::errorInfo() returns an array of error information about the last operation performed by this statement handle. The array consists of at least the following fields:
Element | Information |
---|---|
0 | SQLSTATE error code (a five characters alphanumeric identifier defined in the ANSI SQL standard). |
1 | Driver specific error code. |
2 | Driver specific error message. |
Example #1 Displaying errorInfo() fields for a PDO_ODBC connection to a DB2 database
<?php
/* Provoke an error -- the BONES table does not exist */
$sth = $dbh->prepare('SELECT skull FROM bones');
$sth->execute();
echo "\nPDOStatement::errorInfo():\n";
$arr = $sth->errorInfo();
print_r($arr);
?>
Il precedente esempio visualizzerà:
PDOStatement::errorInfo(): Array ( [0] => 42S02 [1] => -204 [2] => [IBM][CLI Driver][DB2/LINUX] SQL0204N "DANIELS.BONES" is an undefined name. SQLSTATE=42704 )
If your query is successful, PDO::errorInfo() still returns an array. For MySQL 5.x, I get the following...
Array
(
[0] => 00000
[1] =>
[2] =>
)
Seriously errorInfo is your friend. Use it.
If these look like your google searches then you need errorInfo
"no database error showing in php"
"pdo selects from database but wont insert"
"pdo insert not working"
"isnt pdo just a big hype, should I go back to mysql?"
"how much do surgeons make?"
Trust me it will definitely save you hours of insanity if you make it a habit to use it in development. Forget E-ALL, it failed me since well, E-ALL apparently doesn't know that I didn't set a default value in my MySQL table and my query wasnt adding anything to it. So always do this
<?php
$sql = 'do something on a mysql table where foo = :bar';
$stmt = prepare($sql);
$stmt->bindValue(':bar', $foo, PDO::PARAM_[DATA TYPE]);
$stmt->execute();
// very important during development. But take it off in production
$foo_arr = $stmt->errorInfo();
print_r($foo_arr);
//Sample print_r return
/*
Array(
[0] => HY000
[1] => 1364
[2] => Field 'phone' doesn't have a default value
)
Never have I been so happy to see an error
*/
?>
While its common practice for any decent developer to always watch out and try to catch for errors, even the best of us make mistakes. This is not a replacement for exceptions, but the simplicity is priceless.
Ansi sql state Error codes can be found here:
https://docs.oracle.com/cd/F49540_01/DOC/server.815/a58231/appd.htm