Matijn Woudt wrote:
apt-get install php5-mysql
Just to elaborate on that ... php5-common and php5-cli does not include a number
of modules that need to be loaded separately. Choosing one of the database
modules is not the only thing that may need to be added to your list of
additional instal
Matijn Woudt wrote:
> On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 9:40 PM, Ashley
Sheridan
> wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Matijn Woudt
wrote:
>> >On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at
8:55 PM, Ashley Sheridan
>>
>wrote:
>> >
>> >>
>> >>
>> >> Curtis
Maurand wrote:
>> >> >
>> >> >
>> >> >Ethan Rosenberg
wrote:
>> >> >> Dear List -
>> >>
>
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 9:40 PM, Ashley Sheridan
wrote:
>
>
> Matijn Woudt wrote:
> >On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 8:55 PM, Ashley Sheridan
> >wrote:
> >
> >>
> >>
> >> Curtis Maurand wrote:
> >> >
> >> >
> >> >Ethan Rosenberg wrote:
> >> >> Dear List -
> >> >>
> >> >> My
> >> >mysqli extension seems
On Aug 19, 2013 2:32 PM, "Ethan Rosenberg"
wrote:
>
> Dear List -
>
> My mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
>
(REACTED)
Remember: avoid putting passwords - especially for root users - on a
public mailing list, which is also permanently archived.
> echo "hello2";
> var_dump(function_ex
Matijn Woudt wrote:
>On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 8:55 PM, Ashley Sheridan
>wrote:
>
>>
>>
>> Curtis Maurand wrote:
>> >
>> >
>> >Ethan Rosenberg wrote:
>> >> Dear List -
>> >>
>> >> My
>> >mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
>> >>
>> >> $host =
>> >'localhost';
>> >> $user = 'root';
>> >> $pa
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 8:55 PM, Ashley Sheridan
wrote:
>
>
> Curtis Maurand wrote:
> >
> >
> >Ethan Rosenberg wrote:
> >> Dear List -
> >>
> >> My
> >mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
> >>
> >> $host =
> >'localhost';
> >> $user = 'root';
> >> $password = 'SdR3908';
> >> echo "hello2";
>
Curtis Maurand wrote:
>
>
>Ethan Rosenberg wrote:
>> Dear List -
>>
>> My
>mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
>>
>> $host =
>'localhost';
>> $user = 'root';
>> $password = 'SdR3908';
>> echo "hello2";
>>
>var_dump(function_exists('mysqli_connect'));// this returns boo(false)
>> $db = 'S
Ethan Rosenberg wrote:
> Dear List -
>
> My
mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
>
> $host =
'localhost';
> $user = 'root';
> $password = 'SdR3908';
> echo "hello2";
>
var_dump(function_exists('mysqli_connect'));// this returns boo(false)
> $db = 'Store';
> $cxn =
mysqli_connect($host,$use
On Mon, Aug 19, 2013 at 8:02 PM, Ethan Rosenberg <
erosenb...@hygeiabiomedical.com> wrote:
> Dear List -
>
> My mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
>
> $host = 'localhost';
> $user = 'root';
> $password = 'SdR3908';
> echo "hello2";
> var_dump(function_exists('**mysqli_connect'));// this ret
Dear List -
My mysqli extension seems to have gone away.
$host = 'localhost';
$user = 'root';
$password = 'SdR3908';
echo "hello2";
var_dump(function_exists('mysqli_connect'));// this returns boo(false)
$db = 'Store';
$cxn = mysqli_connect($host,$user,$password,$db);
I tried to reinstall -
Anyone? I have not been able to find a solution online.
On 4/1/2013 11:33 AM, Jay Blanchard wrote:
I am putting together an application where we are almost exclusively
using stored procedures in MySQL because most of the heavy lifting (as
it should be) is done in the database.
I have exactly
I am putting together an application where we are almost exclusively
using stored procedures in MySQL because most of the heavy lifting (as
it should be) is done in the database.
I have exactly one situation where I need to execute a stored procedure
and while returning the results if I run a
On Thu, Dec 20, 2012 at 12:18 PM, Stephen wrote:
> I read about the subject in another thread.
>
> Where does PDO fit?
>
> That is what I have used for sometime. Am I good?
Right as rain. PDO is a preferred abstraction layer in PHP and
isn't going anywhere anytime soon.
--
Network Infrast
I read about the subject in another thread.
Where does PDO fit?
That is what I have used for sometime. Am I good?
--
Stephen
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
On 2011-11-13 1:42 AM, Tommy Pham wrote:
>>or db_error ($dbh, $__FILE__, $__LINE__);
>
> __FILE__ are reserved keywords __LINE__. If you intended to use
> variables represent the similar meaning, the suggested approach would
Yes, sorry, was a bit quick there - I'm using __FILE__ __LINE_
On Sat, Nov 12, 2011 at 6:15 AM, Peet Grobler wrote:
> Not sure if this is the correct mailing list to be asking this question
> but here goes:
>
> I've got a prepared statement.
>
> $stmt = $dbh->prepare ("insert into test values (?, ?)")
> or die ("Error: " . $dbh->error);
> $stmt->bind_p
Not sure if this is the correct mailing list to be asking this question
but here goes:
I've got a prepared statement.
$stmt = $dbh->prepare ("insert into test values (?, ?)")
or die ("Error: " . $dbh->error);
$stmt->bind_param ('ii', $var1, $var2)
or die ("Error: " . $dbh->error);
Okay, so I've finally got an opportunity to start converting our code to
use Mysqli instead of the old mysql_* functions. Mysqli is new to me, but
I thought things were going well until the first time I tried to run a
query with a syntax error in it, and it threw up a PHP warning. Being that
Mysqli
---
From: Peet Grobler [mailto:p...@hivemind.net]
Sent: Wednesday, August 31, 2011 4:24 AM
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Subject: [PHP] mysqli sql question
Is it possible to get the actual sql that is being used to query or
update the database?
E.g
$sth = $dbh->prepare ("update table s
On 8/31/2011 1:38 PM, John Black wrote:
> Hi Peet,
>
> not sure if there is a method to echo the sql but you can set your
> development MySQL server to log all queries to a log file.
> Use the log file with tail and you'll get a live view of all queries the
> server attempts to process.
>
I alre
On 08/31/2011 05:23 AM, Peet Grobler wrote:
> Is it possible to get the actual sql that is being used to query or
> update the database?
>
> E.g
> $sth = $dbh->prepare ("update table set field=?, field2=? where id=?);
> mysqli_bind_param ($sth, 'ssi', 'text1', 'text2', 10);
> $sth->execute();
>
> S
On 31.08.2011 11:23, Peet Grobler wrote:
Is it possible to get the actual sql that is being used to query or
update the database?>
E.g
$sth = $dbh->prepare ("update table set field=?, field2=? where id=?);
mysqli_bind_param ($sth, 'ssi', 'text1', 'text2', 10);
$sth->execute();
Something like $st
Is it possible to get the actual sql that is being used to query or
update the database?
E.g
$sth = $dbh->prepare ("update table set field=?, field2=? where id=?);
mysqli_bind_param ($sth, 'ssi', 'text1', 'text2', 10);
$sth->execute();
Something like $sth->sql? Or $dbh->sql?
I want to see "updat
So I have:
$result = $dbh->query ("select * from roles order by name");
$row = mysqli_fetch_object ($result);
function process_field ($which) {
// This fails, I need to know how to do this the right way
if ($row->may_$which == 'Y') {
// Print stuff
} else {
Hello,
On http://www.php.net/manual/en/mysqli.constants.php there are some predefined
constants for MYSQLI_TYPE_TINY_BLOB, MYSQLI_TYPE_MEDIUM_BLOB,
MYSQLI_TYPE_LONG_BLOB, and MYSQLI_TYPE_BLOB. Through some experimentation I
have found that fields in my MySQL database that are declared as 'text
On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 06:48, Daniel Egeberg wrote:
>
> Hi Per,
>
> The manual already supports that. If you install the sqlite extension
> on your webserver, it should work.
Dan;
The question wasn't whether or not it supports that kind of
lookup, but rather why it's not working. We've
On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 08:49, Per Jessen wrote:
> I run a local mirror of the PHP manual, and I most often go straight to
> the "Search for" box to look up the format of a function. With the
> mysqli functions, I've found than many of them simply
> aren't "available" that way. E.g. mysqli_conne
Daniel Brown wrote:
> On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 02:49, Per Jessen wrote:
>> I run a local mirror of the PHP manual, and I most often go straight
>> to the "Search for" box to look up the format of a function. With
>> the mysqli functions, I've found than many of them simply
>> aren't "available" t
On Fri, Mar 12, 2010 at 02:49, Per Jessen wrote:
> I run a local mirror of the PHP manual, and I most often go straight to
> the "Search for" box to look up the format of a function. With the
> mysqli functions, I've found than many of them simply
> aren't "available" that way. E.g. mysqli_conne
I run a local mirror of the PHP manual, and I most often go straight to
the "Search for" box to look up the format of a function. With the
mysqli functions, I've found than many of them simply
aren't "available" that way. E.g. mysqli_connect() - "Sorry, but the
function mysqli_connect is not in
If I am using the mysqli extension and prepared statements, after I
execute bind_param, is there a away to print the actual query that gets
sent to the server?
--
Chris W
KE5GIX
"Protect your digital freedom and privacy, eliminate DRM,
learn more at http://www.defectivebydesign.org/what_is_dr
Hi,
Kyle Terry wrote:
Why don't you want to bind the results?
thats poor programming style and bad performance (dozends of bind
calls). Since there is a method fetch_row(), then why shouldn't I use
it? It is a bit strange that I cannot find any example for its use
besides in conjunction wit
Hi,
You prepare the statement, execute it then use ->fetch() to get the data.
but the documentation says, that ->fetch() is only to fetch data to
variables that have been bound with bind_result() before. But I want to
use fetch_row() instead.
Regards
Marten
--
PHP General Mailing List (ht
You prepare the statement, execute it then use ->fetch() to get the
data.
On Oct 22, 2008, at 1:36 PM, Marten Lehmann <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Hello,
I have a small piece of code where I'm trying to use mysqli with a
prepare-statement. I don't want to bind variables for the fetch,
inst
Hello,
I have a small piece of code where I'm trying to use mysqli with a
prepare-statement. I don't want to bind variables for the fetch, instead
I want to use something like
list($question) = $stmt->fetch_row();
And this fetch_row should exist according to the documentation. But
while mys
Jason Pruim wrote:
No political undertones in this one I promise! :)
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "UPDATE purl.schreur (
On Thu, Sep 11, 2008 at 12:08 PM, Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
> On Sep 11, 2008, at 11:23 AM, Stut wrote:
>
>> On 11 Sep 2008, at 16:15, Jason Pruim wrote:
>>>
>>> Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a record
>>> in a mysql database using mysqli
>>>
>>> Her
On 11 Sep 2008, at 17:08, Jason Pruim wrote:
On Sep 11, 2008, at 11:23 AM, Stut wrote:
On 11 Sep 2008, at 16:15, Jason Pruim wrote:
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update
a record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_s
On Sep 11, 2008, at 11:23 AM, Stut wrote:
On 11 Sep 2008, at 16:15, Jason Pruim wrote:
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "
> >> Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
> >> record in a mysql database using mysqli
> >>
> >> Here is the relevant code:
> >>$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
> >>mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "UPDATE purl.schreur (FName, LName,
> >> email,
> >> phone, record
On 11 Sep 2008, at 16:29, Wolf wrote:
Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
No political undertones in this one I promise! :)
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_stmt_
On Sep 11, 2008, at 11:29 AM, Wolf wrote:
Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
No political undertones in this one I promise! :)
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli
Jason Pruim <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> No political undertones in this one I promise! :)
>
> Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
> record in a mysql database using mysqli
>
> Here is the relevant code:
> $stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
> mysql
On 11 Sep 2008, at 16:15, Jason Pruim wrote:
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "UPDATE purl.schreur (FName, LName,
email, p
No political undertones in this one I promise! :)
Attempting to setup a prepared statement in php that will update a
record in a mysql database using mysqli
Here is the relevant code:
$stmt = mysqli_stmt_init($link);
mysqli_stmt_prepare($stmt, "UPDATE purl.schreur (FName, LName, emai
Hey there
I have been toying around with the following code for a few days:
//Gets the tokens defined in the array $tokensToGet, with the language
defined by $languageId
public static function GetTokens($tokensToGet, $languageId)
{
$query =
@"SELECT
Name,
Value
FROM
Hey there
I have been toying around with the following code for a few days:
prepare($query))
{
$stmt->bind_param('si', $tokensToGet, $language);
$stmt->Execute();
$stmt->Bind_result($name, $value);
while($stmt->fetch())
{
$tokens
Kapil Kapil wrote:
> Hi
>
> How can we enable php-mysqli support on linux machine using yum etc.,
> without reinstalling php again?
Just install the appropriate package.
> Also how to check it - Is php-mysqli package is present or not?
Check output from phpinfo().
/Per
Hi
How can we enable php-mysqli support on linux machine using yum etc.,
without reinstalling php again?
Also how to check it - Is php-mysqli package is present or not?
Thanks
Kapil
On Wed, 2007-12-12 at 10:47 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
>
> >> I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
> >> sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
> >> just about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think th
On Dec 12, 2007 4:47 AM, Per Jessen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
>
> >> I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
> >> sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
> >> just about double the test-effort. Which is why I stil
Robert Cummings wrote:
>> I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any
>> sort of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will
>> just about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think the
>> best option is to mandate _one_ of the APIs and choose you
On Tuesday 11 December 2007, Per Jessen wrote:
> Stut wrote:
> > I couldn't care less what your domain name is, you're still advocating
> > a poor choice IMHO.
>
> I have been trying hard not to join this thread, but ... apart from the
> principle, what's _really_ so poor about it? Having to write
On Dec 11, 2007 4:11 PM, Per Jessen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I can't remember what sort of environment the OP was in, but if any sort
> of organised testing is done, the use of two different APIs will just
> about double the test-effort. Which is why I still think the best
> option is to mand
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 22:11 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
>
> > On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 18:14 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
> >> I have been trying hard not to join this thread, but ... apart from
> >> the principle, what's _really_ so poor about it? Having to write
> >> application
Robert Cummings wrote:
> On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 18:14 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
>> I have been trying hard not to join this thread, but ... apart from
>> the principle, what's _really_ so poor about it? Having to write
>> application code that needs to work with two different APIs is poor
>> enough
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 18:14 +0100, Per Jessen wrote:
> Stut wrote:
>
> > I couldn't care less what your domain name is, you're still advocating
> > a poor choice IMHO.
> >
>
> I have been trying hard not to join this thread, but ... apart from the
> principle, what's _really_ so poor about it?
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 17:01 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
> >> Real life is rarely optimal.
> >
> > That's not a valid excuse for taking the sloppy pig route to
> > development. Sloppy pig's give conscientious developers a bad name. And
> > when they use PHP to create their slop, they give PHP a bad
I don't see a reason to compromise. It would take no longer to call
extension_loaded on each page request than it will to put the variable
in the session. You're right in saying that there's a balance to be
struck, but in this particular case I personally see a right way and a
wrong way and no
Stut wrote:
> I couldn't care less what your domain name is, you're still advocating
> a poor choice IMHO.
>
I have been trying hard not to join this thread, but ... apart from the
principle, what's _really_ so poor about it? Having to write
application code that needs to work with two differen
Richard Heyes wrote:
Real life is rarely optimal.
That's not a valid excuse for taking the sloppy pig route to
development. Sloppy pig's give conscientious developers a bad name. And
when they use PHP to create their slop, they give PHP a bad name.
Well I err towards actually doing something
Real life is rarely optimal.
That's not a valid excuse for taking the sloppy pig route to
development. Sloppy pig's give conscientious developers a bad name. And
when they use PHP to create their slop, they give PHP a bad name.
Well I err towards actually doing something useful. Businesses can
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 16:31 +, Richard Heyes wrote:
> > Sre, sessions are for whatever you choose to put in them. That's
> > like saying bodies are for whatever a crazed murderer chooses to put in
> > them...
>
> No it's not.
Yes it is. Neither is a good argument.
> > the statement
Sre, sessions are for whatever you choose to put in them. That's
like saying bodies are for whatever a crazed murderer chooses to put in
them...
No it's not.
> the statement is true, but it's not optimal.
Real life is rarely optimal.
--
Richard Heyes
http://www.websupportsolutions.co.
So? It's there - use it.
So are cookies, would you stuff this into a cookie? No, because that's
not what cookies are there for.
Not because "it's not what cookies are for" - but because sessions are a
more efficient and easier to use storage medium.
You could potentially be pointlessly dup
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 15:25 +, Stut wrote:
> Richard Heyes wrote:
> >> Because it's not user data, it's server data.
> >
> > So? It's there - use it.
>
> So are cookies, would you stuff this into a cookie? No, because that's
> not what cookies are there for.
>
> "Because it's there" is neve
Richard Heyes wrote:
Because it's not user data, it's server data.
So? It's there - use it.
So are cookies, would you stuff this into a cookie? No, because that's
not what cookies are there for.
"Because it's there" is never a good reason to do something.
That's entirely the wrong place
Because it's not user data, it's server data.
So? It's there - use it.
That's entirely the wrong place to
store something like which database API is installed.
Not really. You could even wrap a function called (for example)
Feature() around it.
Yeah, really. Sessions are for user data. I
Stut wrote:
> However, I'd expect a stat on that
> file will be more expensive than calling extension_loaded.
Difficult to say, but a stat() is cheap, especially if the inode is
cached already.
/Per Jessen, Zürich
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://
Stut wrote:
> Richard Heyes wrote:
>>> You use a session variable for that?
>>
>> Why not?
>
> Because it's not user data, it's server data.
>
>>> That's entirely the wrong place to
>>> store something like which database API is installed.
>>
>> Not really. You could even wrap a function called (
Richard Heyes wrote:
You use a session variable for that?
Why not?
Because it's not user data, it's server data.
That's entirely the wrong place to
store something like which database API is installed.
Not really. You could even wrap a function called (for example)
Feature() around it.
You use a session variable for that?
Why not?
That's entirely the wrong place to
store something like which database API is installed.
Not really. You could even wrap a function called (for example)
Feature() around it.
> It should a class
variable or global configuration variable. Heck,
On Tue, 2007-12-11 at 13:02 +0900, Dave M G wrote:
> Zoltan, Per, Richard, Chris, Daniel, Larry,
>
> Thank you for responding.
>
> I have created a method in the class that handles my database
> connections that will first test on extension_loaded(mysqli) before
> connecting to the database.
>
Zoltan, Per, Richard, Chris, Daniel, Larry,
Thank you for responding.
I have created a method in the class that handles my database
connections that will first test on extension_loaded(mysqli) before
connecting to the database.
Then I store the result in a session variable for reference, so
On Monday 10 December 2007, Dave M G wrote:
> One is based on the assumption that mysqli is as likely not to be
> available as it is to be installed. In this case I should write my
> scripts to test whether it exists and then use either mysqli or straight
> mysql commands as appropriate. If this i
Per Jessen wrote:
Richard Heyes wrote:
another. This is one of the reasons abstraction layers exist.
Which brings us to alternative #3 - odbc.
That's probably less likely to be available than mysqli. If you're
targetting php5 then you could use pdo::mysql as well (and there's even
the l
On Dec 10, 2007 3:16 AM, Dave M G <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Which assumption should I be proceeding with?
Rather than assume (because we all know what happens then), why
not build for both scenarios? Here's an example of one way
'.mysql_error()."\n");
} else {
$db_conn = mysql
Richard Heyes wrote:
> another. This is one of the reasons abstraction layers exist.
Which brings us to alternative #3 - odbc.
/Per Jessen, Zürich
--
PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/)
To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php
How exactly do I test for the presence of mysqli from within a script?
IIRC there's a function called extension_loaded(). Or something similar.
Or are you saying I have two different versions of my script?
Not at all. Taking PEAR::DB for example, you could test for the
existence of mysqli,
Dave M G wrote:
> Richard said:
> > Alter your program to support both - use mysqi if it's avilable,
>> mysql if it's not.
>
> How exactly do I test for the presence of mysqli from within a script?
> Or are you saying I have two different versions of my script?
I think you can test for the avai
2007. 12. 10, hétfő keltezéssel 21.58-kor Dave M G ezt írta:
> Richard, Per, Andres,
>
> Thank you for responding.
>
> If it were entirely my web site to dictate what to do with, I would just
> switch for a server that has mysqli available to me.
>
> However, in this one case, the web site is o
Richard, Per, Andres,
Thank you for responding.
If it were entirely my web site to dictate what to do with, I would just
switch for a server that has mysqli available to me.
However, in this one case, the web site is owned by a small, not very
profitable group that has reasons to stay with t
> -Original Message-
> From: Per Jessen [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> Dave M G wrote:
>
> > One is based on the assumption that mysqli is as likely not to be
> > available as it is to be installed. In this case I should write my
> > scripts to test whether it exists and then use either my
One is based on the assumption that mysqli is as likely not to be
available as it is to be installed. In this case I should write my
scripts to test whether it exists and then use either mysqli or straight
mysql commands as appropriate. If this is the way to go, what do I do to
test for the exi
Dave M G wrote:
> One is based on the assumption that mysqli is as likely not to be
> available as it is to be installed. In this case I should write my
> scripts to test whether it exists and then use either mysqli or
> straight mysql commands as appropriate. If this is the way to go, what
> do I
PHP List,
Based on what seemed to be good advice to switch to using mysqli for
interacting with a MySQL database, I built a content management system
that uses mysqli for all it's calls.
It works great on a lot of my servers. However, I just discovered that
one web hosting service I use does
On 16/05/07, Lee PHP <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
/** Insert record. */
public function insert() {
$sql = "INSERT INTO table (" .
"field_1, " .
"field_2, " .
"field_3) " .
"?, " .
"?, " .
Lee PHP wrote:
Hi there,
I'm new to OO-PHP and have encountered a problem that I just can't
figure out. I have a class called DBAccess that extends mysqli. In a
nutshell, it looks like this:
If I execute the following code:
$conn = DBAccess::getInstance();
Does that give you an object? C
Hi there,
I'm new to OO-PHP and have encountered a problem that I just can't
figure out. I have a class called DBAccess that extends mysqli. In a
nutshell, it looks like this:
class DBAccess extends mysqli {
private static $instance;
private static $preferences;
/** Create an instance
I have a couple of questions about php and accessing mysql 4.1 via
the mysqli interface.
I get the following warning on a script:
Warning: mysqli::mysqli() [connections in
but this server is in development. I wanted to look at processes
(it's the same for show full processlist):
+
On Sat, Jan 14, 2006 at 03:18:55AM +0530, anirudh dutt wrote:
> On 1/5/06, Curt Zirzow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > On Wed, Jan 04, 2006 at 12:31:02AM +0530, anirudh dutt wrote:
> > > hi
> > > the subject is pretty much what the problem is.
> > >
> > > if i use
> > > $st1 = $sql->stmt_init(); //
On 1/5/06, Curt Zirzow <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jan 04, 2006 at 12:31:02AM +0530, anirudh dutt wrote:
> > hi
> > the subject is pretty much what the problem is.
> >
> > if i use
> > $st1 = $sql->stmt_init(); // $sql is a mysqli obj/conn
> > $st1->prepare("select `num` from `activity` wh
On Wed, Jan 04, 2006 at 12:31:02AM +0530, anirudh dutt wrote:
> hi
> the subject is pretty much what the problem is.
>
> if i use
> $st1 = $sql->stmt_init(); // $sql is a mysqli obj/conn
> $st1->prepare("select `num` from `activity` where `id` = ?");
> $st1->bind_param('s', $myid);
> $myid = '3f6d
hi
the subject is pretty much what the problem is.
if i use
$st1 = $sql->stmt_init(); // $sql is a mysqli obj/conn
$st1->prepare("select `num` from `activity` where `id` = ?");
$st1->bind_param('s', $myid);
$myid = '3f6d017d3e728b057bcc082a7db75a57'; // forcing value to check
$st1->execute();
$st1
PHP Superman wrote:
Hold on, I heard that you can't run the mysql and mysqli php
extensions , try removing the mysql extension if my other advice
doesen't work
Please reply to the list.
You can compile php with both.
From the manual :
http://us2.php.net/mysqli
If you would like to instal
PHP Superman wrote:*
What OS are you using? I think that you entered the wrong filename. for
windows i use php_mysqli.dll . Somewhere in php.ini there is a list of
extensions you can use, uncomment the php_mysqli.dll , copy php_mysqli.dll
to the php install directory and change the php.ini extens
/www/cgi-bin/db_connect.php on line 4,
>
> I added extenstion=mysqli.so to my php.ini
>
> Erik
>
> - Original Message -
> From: "PHP Superman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Erik Saline" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Cc:
> Sent: Wednesday, Dec
erman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "Erik Saline" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Cc:
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 6:56 PM
Subject: Re: [PHP] mysqli class not found
you are not missing anything, you are actually adding to much. Using "new"
is for making objects, if you t
you are not missing anything, you are actually adding to much. Using "new"
is for making objects, if you take away the "new" in the $result variable
declaration it should work fine.
On 12/28/05, Erik Saline <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
> - Original Message -
> From: Erik Saline
> To: php-
- Original Message -
From: Erik Saline
To: php-general@lists.php.net
Sent: Wednesday, December 28, 2005 1:08 PM
I installed Apache, PHP, and Mysql during the Fedora Core 4 installation.
PHP 5.0.4
MYSQL 4.1.14
I used php -i to show that mysql and mysqli were installed.
Configure Comm
1 - 100 of 128 matches
Mail list logo