............................................________
....................................,.-'"...................``~.,
.............................,.-"..................................."-.,
.........................,/...............................................":,
.....................,?......................................................,
.................../...........................................................,}
................./......................................................,:`^`..}
.............../...................................................,:"........./
..............?.....__.........................................:`.........../
............./__.(....."~-,_..............................,:`........../
.........../(_...."~,_........"~,_....................,:`........_/
..........{.._$;_......"=,_......."-,_.......,.-~-,},.~";/....}
...........((.....*~_......."=-._......";,,./`..../"............../
...,,,___.`~,......"~.,....................`.....}............../
............(....`=-,,.......`........................(......;_,,-"
............/.`~,......`-...................................../
.............`~.*-,.....................................|,./.....,__
,,_..........}.>-._...................................|..............`=~-,
.....`=~-,__......`,.................................
...................`=~-,,.,...............................
................................`:,,...........................`..............__
.....................................`=-,...................,%`>--==``
........................................_..........._,-%.......`
...................................,
On Sunday, August 4, 2013 3:27:36 PM UTC-4, Anthony wrote:
>
> (actually would've just put the .nine into the select and save a line)
>>
>
> That wouldn't save a line -- still have to specify the field even if the
> row contains only one field.
>
>>
>> BUT what if my field name is a variable like so?
>> row = db((db.squares.game_code==session.game_code) &
>> (db.squares.row_num==row_vis)).select()
>> winner= row[0].[winning_col]
>> (I also tried the winning_col in () and '')
>>
>
> A Row object works like a dictionary, so:
>
> row[0][winning_col]
>
> Mentioned near the end of this
> section<http://web2py.com/books/default/chapter/29/06/the-database-abstraction-layer#select>in
> the book.
>
> Anthony
>
--
---
You received this message because you are subscribed to the Google Groups
"web2py-users" group.
To unsubscribe from this group and stop receiving emails from it, send an email
to [email protected].
For more options, visit https://groups.google.com/groups/opt_out.