Some corrections ;o)
$mysqli_type = array();
$mysqli_type[0] = "DECIMAL";
$mysqli_type[1] = "TINYINT";
$mysqli_type[2] = "SMALLINT";
$mysqli_type[3] = "INTEGER";
$mysqli_type[4] = "FLOAT";
$mysqli_type[5] = "DOUBLE";
$mysqli_type[7] = "TIMESTAMP";
$mysqli_type[8] = "BIGINT";
$mysqli_type[9] = "MEDIUMINT";
$mysqli_type[10] = "DATE";
$mysqli_type[11] = "TIME";
$mysqli_type[12] = "DATETIME";
$mysqli_type[13] = "YEAR";
$mysqli_type[14] = "DATE";
$mysqli_type[16] = "BIT";
$mysqli_type[246] = "DECIMAL";
$mysqli_type[247] = "ENUM";
$mysqli_type[248] = "SET";
$mysqli_type[249] = "TINYBLOB";
$mysqli_type[250] = "MEDIUMBLOB";
$mysqli_type[251] = "LONGBLOB";
$mysqli_type[252] = "BLOB";
$mysqli_type[253] = "VARCHAR";
$mysqli_type[254] = "CHAR";
$mysqli_type[255] = "GEOMETRY";
mysqli->field_count
mysqli_field_count
(PHP 5)
mysqli->field_count -- mysqli_field_count — Returns the number of columns for the most recent query
Descrierea
Object oriented style (property):
mysqli_result
int $field_count;
Procedural style:
Returns the number of columns for the most recent query on the connection represented by the link parameter. This function can be useful when using the mysqli_store_result() function to determine if the query should have produced a non-empty result set or not without knowing the nature of the query.
Parametri
- link
-
Numai stilul procedural: Un identificator al legăturii întors de mysqli_connect() sau mysqli_init()
Valorile întroarse
An integer representing the number of fields in a result set.
Exemple
Example #1 Object oriented style
<?php
$mysqli = new mysqli("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "test");
$mysqli->query( "DROP TABLE IF EXISTS friends");
$mysqli->query( "CREATE TABLE friends (id int, name varchar(20))");
$mysqli->query( "INSERT INTO friends VALUES (1,'Hartmut'), (2, 'Ulf')");
$mysqli->real_query("SELECT * FROM friends");
if ($mysqli->field_count) {
/* this was a select/show or describe query */
$result = $mysqli->store_result();
/* process resultset */
$row = $result->fetch_row();
/* free resultset */
$result->close();
}
/* close connection */
$mysqli->close();
?>
Example #2 Procedural style
<?php
$link = mysqli_connect("localhost", "my_user", "my_password", "test");
mysqli_query($link, "DROP TABLE IF EXISTS friends");
mysqli_query($link, "CREATE TABLE friends (id int, name varchar(20))");
mysqli_query($link, "INSERT INTO friends VALUES (1,'Hartmut'), (2, 'Ulf')");
mysqli_real_query($link, "SELECT * FROM friends");
if (mysqli_field_count($link)) {
/* this was a select/show or describe query */
$result = mysqli_store_result($link);
/* process resultset */
$row = mysqli_fetch_row($result);
/* free resultset */
mysqli_free_result($result);
}
/* close connection */
mysqli_close($link);
?>
mysqli->field_count
Jonathan
06-Mar-2007 03:43
06-Mar-2007 03:43
Typer85 at gmail dot com
02-Jan-2007 08:33
02-Jan-2007 08:33
For those interested and to clarify the Manual Entry.
For query statements that are DESIGNED to return a result set of some sort, this function will always return the number of fields in the table that was queried.
I said DESIGNED because the return value has no effect on whether or not the actual query matched any rows or not.
For example, say I have a table that has 2 fields and only 10 rows. I issue the following query:
<?php
// Assume Connection Blah Blah.
mysqli_query( $connObject , "Select * From `table` Where `Id` > 1000");
// Get Number Of Fields.
mysqli_field_count( $connObject );
// Will Return 2 --> The Number of fields in the table!
?>
It is quite clear that the query itself will never return a result set because I asked it to return rows which have an Id over 1000 and there are only 10 rows.
But because the nature of the query itself is to return a result set, the field count is always returned no matter what.
In contrast, if the query does anything that does not return a result set by nature, such as an insert or update, the field count will always be 0.
Hence, you can easily determine the nature of this query dynamically using these return values.
Good Luck,
?>
dedlfix
18-Jul-2006 10:26
18-Jul-2006 10:26
There are MYSQLI_TYPE_* constants for the type property (listed in http://php.net/manual/en/ref.mysqli.php).
e.g.
<?php
if ($finfo->type == MYSQLI_TYPE_VAR_STRING)
// a VARCHAR
jakerosoft at hotmail dot com
16-Aug-2005 09:15
16-Aug-2005 09:15
<?
$fieldinfo = $result->fetch_field();
if ($fieldinfo & MYSQLI_NOT_NULL_FLAG) {
print "not null flag is set";
} else {
print "not null flag is NOT set";
}
?>
Marc-André
07-Jul-2005 03:56
07-Jul-2005 03:56
The "type" property will return a numerical representation of a field type instead of a "meaningful" string.
Here is an array that may help you:
<?php
$mysqli_type = array();
$mysqli_type[0] = "decimal";
$mysqli_type[1] = "tinyint";
$mysqli_type[2] = "smallint";
$mysqli_type[3] = "int";
$mysqli_type[4] = "float";
$mysqli_type[5] = "double";
$mysqli_type[7] = "timestamp";
$mysqli_type[8] = "bigint";
$mysqli_type[9] = "mediumint";
$mysqli_type[10] = "date";
$mysqli_type[11] = "time";
$mysqli_type[12] = "datetime";
$mysqli_type[13] = "year";
$mysqli_type[252] = "blob"; // text, blob, tinyblob,mediumblob, etc...
$mysqli_type[253] = "string"; // varchar and char
$mysqli_type[254] = "enum";
?>
