Reputation:
I'm trying not to get frustrated, but I've recently learned that mysql_*
is deprecated in PHP. I've decided that I would learn how to use PDO.
I've just been looking at it this afternoon, and connecting to the database using it was easy, but then I wanted to fetch a row with it and save the row as an array indexed by the column names (the same way as the function mysql_fetch_array
did). I can't figure it out to save my life.
I'll post my code to clarify, and I'm sure it is something simple (all programming errors are always simple), but I am definitely doing something wrong.
// Connect to the database
$host = $_PARAM["DatabaseServer"];
$db = $_PARAM["MainDatabase"];
$dbuser = $_PARAM["DatabaseUser"];
$dbpass = $_PARAM["DatabasePass"];
try
{
$Database = new PDO("mysql:host=$host;dbname=$db", $dbuser, $dbpass);
}
catch (PDOException $e)
{
echo "There was an unexpected error. Please try again, or contact us with concerns";
}
$stmt = $Database->prepare("SELECT * FROM users WHERE username=?");
$stmt->execute(array($sUserCook));
$row = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
echo $row["username"];
Upvotes: 8
Views: 67194
Reputation: 29985
fetchAll
does what it says: it fetches all results for a query. Since it fetches a lot of results, you'll get an indexed array.
fetch
does what you might be looking for if you want only one row: it fetches one result for a query. If you're converting mysql_*
code to PDO, the quickest way would be to just use this method instead of mysql_fetch_assoc
.
If you're still going with fetchAll
: your code would probably just look like this:
$rows = $stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
foreach ($rows as $row) {
echo $row['username'];
}
Like I said, if you're just converting legacy code to PDO code, it might be easier to just change all queries to prepared statements and replace the following:
mysql_fetch_assoc($result)
$stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC)
mysql_num_rows($result)
$stmt->rowCount()
while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {}
foreach ($stmt->fetchAll(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC) as $row) {}
Upvotes: 20
Reputation: 79
Use
$row = $stmt->fetch(PDO::FETCH_ASSOC);
You will get the first query result.
Upvotes: 1