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pg_cancel_query> <PostgreSQL Funções
Last updated: Fri, 14 Nov 2008

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pg_affected_rows

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5)

pg_affected_rowsRetorna o número de registros afetados (linhas)

Descrição

int pg_affected_rows ( resource $result )

pg_affected_rows() retorna o número de linhas (instâncias/registros/linhas) afetados por consultas (queries) INSERT, UPDATE e DELETE executados por pg_query(). Se nenhuma linha foi afetada, ela retornará 0.

Exemplo #1 pg_affected_rows()

<?php
     $result 
pg_query($conn"INSERT INTO authors VALUES ('Orwell', 2002, 'Animal Farm')");
     
$cmdtuples pg_affected_rows($result);
     echo 
$cmdtuples " tuples are affected.\n";
?>

Nota: Esta função costumava ser chamada de pg_cmdtuples().

Veja também pg_query() e pg_num_rows().



pg_cancel_query> <PostgreSQL Funções
Last updated: Fri, 14 Nov 2008
 
add a note add a note User Contributed Notes
pg_affected_rows
Anonymous
20-Dec-2007 03:02
There is something called auto-commit, when you supply more than one query delimited by ; semicolon all-or-none is done if one fails. No need for BEGIN;COMMIT;ROLLBACK when doing one query. its logic to mee pg_affected_rows() returns affected rows and if you want to do 2 queries apart from each other.. do a BEGIN and then 1 and get pg_affected_rows() then do 2 and get pg_affected_rows() and then finally do COMMIT;
Anonymous
14-Nov-2007 07:45
pg-affected-rows () only runs on the LAST SQL STATEMENT executed.  If you compound several statements together then pg_affected_rows might not return what you expect. 

For example:

<?php

$result
= pg_query ('BEGIN; INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES (\'baz\'; COMMIT');

echo (
pg_affected_rows ($result));

?>

will cause 0 to be printed, because the last statement executed by Postgres was COMMIT, which doesn't affect any rows. 

I haven't tried this so am not certain it works, but you SHOULD be able to get the row counts you want if you split your queries up. 

For example:

<?php

$result
= pg_query ('BEGIN; INSERT INTO foo (bar) VALUES (\'baz\';');

echo (
pg_affected_rows ($result));

pg_query ('COMMIT;');
?>

should allow you to get the number of rows affected by the previous query.  I haven't tried this yet though, so don't count on it.
05-Aug-2005 03:31
That's not quite true, I've been able to execute multiple queries in a single call just fine. In stead, it has to do with the fact this function returns the affected rows for the last executed query, not the last set of queries specified to a single call to pg_query.
29-Jun-2005 06:15
Concering Bruno Baguette's note:

The pg_query function only allows one query per function call.  When you do your
$sql="BEGIN;
INSERT ...
COMMIT;";
$result=pg_query($conn,$sql);
echo pg_affected_rows($result);

you get a zero, because only the BEGIN; is executed.

The single query per call is, I beleive, a PHP builtin protection against SQL injection attacks.  (Ie someone submitting a string paramter that ends the current query and appends another one)
Bruno Baguette
28-Jun-2005 01:45
Note that when you submit several SQL queries, within one BEGIN;COMMIT; like this one :

$SQLQuery = 'BEGIN;';
$SQLQuery.= 'INSERT INTO a (a,b) VALUES (1,2);';
$SQLQuery.= 'INSERT INTO b (ref_b,c) VALUES (2,5);';
$SQLQuery.= 'COMMIT;';

$HandleResults = pg_query($SQLQuery);
echo(pg_affected_rows($HandleResults));

pg_affected_rows() will return 0

pg_cancel_query> <PostgreSQL Funções
Last updated: Fri, 14 Nov 2008
 
 
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