Not really true, unless I learned programming in a different way ;-)
I mean, if I send an update query, like update table set
field1=$nfield1, field2=$nfield2 ..., I don't know WHICH fields have
changed. mysql_affected_rows() only reports how many records were
changed. So, if I want to know
I mean, if I send an update query, like update table set
field1=$nfield1, field2=$nfield2 ..., I don't know WHICH fields have
changed. mysql_affected_rows() only reports how many records were
changed. So, if I want to know which fields have changed, I should
check
it before I send the query?