On Fri, Nov 11, 2011 at 10:41 AM, Ron Piggott
ron.pigg...@actsministries.org wrote:
?php
$dsh = 'mysql:host=localhost;dbname='.$database;
$dbh = new PDO($dsh, $username, $password);
#query for the authorization code
$query = SELECT `authorization_code` FROM
2011/11/11 Amit Tandon att...@gmail.com:
U can update the record with following
===
$result = mysql_query(UPDATE tax set mwool40_
totqty = $res, $connection) or die(error
updating database);
Won't this update every row in the table?
I think you'd want:
$result =
I'm curious how others feel about this. When I'm creating an SQL
string, either for a non-prepared or prepared execution, I build it in
a variable and then pass the variable to the query or prepare
function. This lets me easily add something to view the SQL statement,
and also if there's an error,