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MySQL Funktionen

<<mysql_fetch_array

mysql_fetch_field>>

mysql_fetch_assoc

(PHP 4 >= 4.0.3, PHP 5)

mysql_fetch_assoc Liefert einen Datensatz als assoziatives Array

Beschreibung

array mysql_fetch_assoc ( resource $Ergebnis )

Liefert ein assoziatives Array, das den geholten entprechenden Datensatz enthält. Sind keine weiteren Datensätze vorhanden gibt diese Funktion FALSE zurück.

mysql_fetch_assoc() entspricht in der Funktionsweise exakt dem Aufruf von mysql_fetch_array() mit Angabe von MYSQL_ASSOC als optionalen zweiten Parameter. Diese Funktion liefert Ihnen nur ein assoziatives Array. Das war das ursprüngliche Verhalten von mysql_fetch_array(). Falls Sie sowohl numerische, als auch assoziative Indizes benötigen, verwenden Sie mysql_fetch_array().

Falls zwei oder mehrere Felder des Ergebnisses den gleichen Feldnamen haben, dann wird nur der Wert des letzten Felds im Array unter diesem Feldnamen abgelegt. Um auch auf die anderen, gleichnamigen, Felder zugreifen zu können, müssen Sie entweder numerische Indizes und damit mysql_fetch_row() benutzen, oder Aliase für Ihre Felder anlegen. Zur Verwendung von Aliasen schauen Sie sich das Beispiel unter der Beschreibung von mysql_fetch_array() an.

Zu betonen ist, dass der Gebrauch von mysql_fetch_assoc() nicht signifikant langsamer ist als mysql_fetch_row(), obwohl die Funktion einen sichtlichen Mehrwert bietet.

Hinweis: Feldnamen, die von dieser Funktion zurückgegeben werden, unterscheiden sich in der Groß-/Kleinschreibung.

Hinweis: Diese Funktion setzt NULL-Felder auf den PHP Wert-NULL.

Beispiel #1 Ein ausführliches Beispiel zumysql_fetch_assoc()

<?php

$conn 
mysql_connect("localhost""mysql_user""mysql_password");

if (!
$conn) {
    echo 
"Keine Verbindung zur DB: " mysql_error();
    exit;
}

if (!
mysql_select_db("mydbname")) {
    echo 
"Kann  mydbname nicht auswählen: " mysql_error();
    exit;
}

$sql "SELECT id as userid, fullname, userstatus 
        FROM   sometable
        WHERE  userstatus = 1"
;

$result mysql_query($sql);

if (!
$result) {
    echo 
"Anfrage ($sql) konnte nicht ausgeführt werden : " mysql_error();
    exit;
}

if (
mysql_num_rows($result) == 0) {
    echo 
"Keine Zeilen gefunden, nichts auszugeben, daher Abbruch";
    exit;
}

// Solange eine Zeile mit Daten existiert, wird dies in dem assoziativen Array
// $row abgelegt.
// Anmerkung: Wenn Sie nur eine Zeile erwarten, brauchen Sie keine Schleife.
// Anmerkung: Wenn Sie extract($row) innerhalb der folgenden Schleife
//            verwenden, können Sie damit die Variablen
//            $userid, $fullname und $userstatus erzeugen.

while ($row mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
    echo 
$row["userid"];
    echo 
$row["fullname"];
    echo 
$row["userstatus"];
}

mysql_free_result($result);

?>

Siehe auch mysql_fetch_row(), mysql_fetch_array(), mysql_query() und mysql_error()


25 BenutzerBeiträge:
- Beiträge aktualisieren...
george at georgefisher dot com
21.04.2009 16:51
Thanks to to R. Bradley for the implode idea. The following fixes a few bugs and includes quote_smart functionality (and has been tested)

<?php
  
function mysql_insert_assoc ($my_table, $my_array) {
  
  
//
   // Insert values into a MySQL database
   // Includes quote_smart code to foil SQL Injection
   //
   // A call to this function of:
   //
   //  $val1 = "foobar";
   //  $val2 = 495;
   //  mysql_insert_assoc("tablename", array(col1=>$val1, col2=>$val2, col3=>"val3", col4=>720, col5=>834.987));
   //
   // Sends the following query:
   //  INSERT INTO 'tablename' (col1, col2, col3, col4, col5) values ('foobar', 495, 'val3', 720, 834.987)
   //
 
      
global $db_link;
      
      
// Find all the keys (column names) from the array $my_array
      
$columns = array_keys($my_array);

      
// Find all the values from the array $my_array
      
$values = array_values($my_array);
      
      
// quote_smart the values
      
$values_number = count($values);
       for (
$i = 0; $i < $values_number; $i++)
         {
        
$value = $values[$i];
         if (
get_magic_quotes_gpc()) { $value = stripslashes($value); }
         if (!
is_numeric($value))    { $value = "'" . mysql_real_escape_string($value, $db_link) . "'"; }
        
$values[$i] = $value;
         }
        
      
// Compose the query
      
$sql = "INSERT INTO $my_table ";

      
// create comma-separated string of column names, enclosed in parentheses
      
$sql .= "(" . implode(", ", $columns) . ")";
      
$sql .= " values ";

      
// create comma-separated string of values, enclosed in parentheses
      
$sql .= "(" . implode(", ", $values) . ")";
      
      
$result = @mysql_query ($sql) OR die ("<br />\n<span style=\"color:red\">Query: $sql UNsuccessful :</span> " . mysql_error() . "\n<br />");

       return (
$result) ? true : false;
   }
?>
Daniel Chcouri - 333222 +A-T+ gmail
2.04.2009 13:45
Fetching all the results to array with one liner:

<?php
$result
= mysql_query(...);
while((
$resultArray[] = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) || array_pop($resultArray));
?>
josh at joshstrike dot com
27.12.2008 12:40
Here's a nifty function to copy a whole table to another table. Takes as its arguments
$z -> the result of a SQL query with columns matching the table you're copying into.
$toTable -> string name of the table to copy into.
$link_identifier -> the db resource of the table you're copying into.
If anyone can find a faster way to do this, I'd be glad to know about it...

<?php
function mysql_multirow_copy($z,$toTable,$link_identifier) {
   
$fields = "";
    for (
$i=0;$i<mysql_num_fields($z);$i++) {
        if (
$i>0) {
           
$fields .= ",";
        }
       
$fields .= mysql_field_name($z,$i);
    }
   
$q = "INSERT INTO $toTable ($fields) VALUES";
   
$c = 0;
   
mysql_data_seek($z,0); //critical reset in case $z has been parsed beforehand. !
   
while ($a = mysql_fetch_assoc($z)) {
        foreach (
$a as $as) {
           
$a[key($a)] = addslashes($as);
           
next ($a);
        }
        if (
$c>0) {
           
$q .= ",";
        }
       
$q .= "('".implode(array_values($a),"','")."')";
       
$c++;
    }
   
$q .= ";";
   
$z = mysql_query($q,$link_identifier);
    return (
$q);
}
?>
alx at inbox dot lv
1.04.2008 2:36
Alternate option for mysqk_fetch_assoc

I spent a day thinking.. damn!

<?php
function &dbFetch(&$result) {
   
dbTimeOn();
    if (
$EOF) $rs = false;
    else {
       
dbMoveNext($result,$fields,$EOF);
       
$rs = $fields;
    }
   
dbTimeOff();
    return
$rs;
}

function &
dbMoveNext(&$result,&$fields,&$EOF) {
    if (
$fields =& mysql_fetch_array($result,MYSQL_ASSOC)) {
        return
true;
    }
    if (!
$EOF) {
       
$EOF = true;
    }
    return
false;
}
?>
Hope it willl help someone.
nick at homefeedback dot com
22.03.2007 1:50
function array2table: small fix to the post below that handles data returned from mysql that is either null or 0...

This is a useful script for displaying MySQL results in an HTML table.

<?

function array2table($arr,$width)
   {
  
$count = count($arr);
   if(
$count > 0){
      
reset($arr);
      
$num = count(current($arr));
       echo
"<table align=\"center\" border=\"1\"cellpadding=\"5\" cellspacing=\"0\" width=\"$width\">\n";
       echo
"<tr>\n";
       foreach(
current($arr) as $key => $value){
           echo
"<th>";
           echo
$key."&nbsp;";
           echo
"</th>\n";  
           }  
       echo
"</tr>\n";
       while (
$curr_row = current($arr)) {
           echo
"<tr>\n";
          
$col = 1;
           while (
false !== ($curr_field = current($curr_row))) {
               echo
"<td>";
               echo
$curr_field."&nbsp;";
               echo
"</td>\n";
              
next($curr_row);
              
$col++;
               }
           while(
$col <= $num){
               echo
"<td>&nbsp;</td>\n";
              
$col++;      
           }
           echo
"</tr>\n";
          
next($arr);
           }
       echo
"</table>\n";
       }
   }

?>

<?

// Add DB connection script here

$query = "SELECT * FROM mytable";
$result = mysql_query($query);
while(
$row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)){
 
$array[] = $row; }
     
array2table($array,600); // Will output a table of 600px width

?>
Typer85 at gmail dot com
1.12.2006 2:21
Please be advised that the resource result that you pass to this function can be thought of as being passed by reference because a resource is simply a pointer to a memory location.

Because of this, you can not loop through a resource result twice in the same script before resetting the pointer back to the start position.

For example:

----------------
<?php

// Assume We Already Queried Our Database.

// Loop Through Result Set.

while( $queryContent = mysql_fetch_row( $queryResult ) {

   
// Display.

   
echo $queryContent[ 0 ];
}

// We looped through the resource result already so the
// the pointer is no longer pointing at any rows.

// If we decide to loop through the same resource result
// again, the function will always return false because it
// will assume there are no more rows.

// So the following code, if executed after the previous code
// segment will not work.

while( $queryContent = mysql_fetch_row( $queryResult ) {

   
// Display.

   
echo $queryContent[ 0 ];
}

// Because $queryContent is now equal to FALSE, the loop
// will not be entered.

?>
----------------

The only solution to this is to reset the pointer to make it point at the first row again before the second code segment, so now the complete code will look as follows:

----------------
<?php

// Assume We Already Queried Our Database.

// Loop Through Result Set.

while( $queryContent = mysql_fetch_row( $queryResult ) {

   
// Display.

   
echo $queryContent[ 0 ];
}

// Reset Our Pointer.

mysql_data_seek( $queryResult );

// Loop Again.

while( $queryContent = mysql_fetch_row( $queryResult ) {

   
// Display.

   
echo $queryContent[ 0 ];
}

?>
----------------

Of course you would have to do extra checks to make sure that the number of rows in the result is not 0 or else mysql_data_seek itself will return false and an error will be raised.

Also please note that this applies to all functions that fetch result sets, including mysql_fetch_row, mysql_fetch_assos, and mysql_fetch_array.
AK-Palme
27.11.2006 17:14
This is a fetch-function useful while using multiple tables in your query:

function sqlf($result){
    $row = mysql_fetch_row($result);
    if($row === FALSE) return FALSE;
   
    for ($i = 0; $i < mysql_num_fields($result); $i++) {
        $meta = mysql_fetch_field($result, $i);
        $data[$meta ->table . '.' . $meta->name] = $row[$i];
    }
    return $data;
}

the result will be an array containing fields like this:
[table.field] => value
JPM
28.10.2006 10:00
For the last post, I thing there is a little mistake :

the second

if (count($columns)>0)

should be

if (count($values)>0)

By the way, thx for this useful function.

16.10.2006 21:05
I just fixed some things in my own mysql_insert_assoc - I used it in development and just noticed things that went wrong...

<?php
class MySQL {
 static
$link = NULL;
 static function
uncached_insert ($table, $values) {
 
// Find all the keys (column names) from the array $my_array
 
$columns = array_keys($values);

 
// Find all the values from the array

 
var_export($columns);
 
reset($values);
  while (list(
$key, $val) = each($values)) {
  
$values[$key] = mysql_real_escape_string($val,self::$link);
  }

 
// We compose the query
 
$sql = 'INSERT INTO `'.$table.'` ';
 
// implode the column names, inserting '`, `' between each
  // we add the enclosing quotes at the same time
 
if (count($columns)>0) {
  
$sql .= '(`' . implode('`, `', $columns) . '`)';
  }
 
$sql .= ' VALUES ';
 
// Same with the values
 
if (count($columns)>0) {
  
$sql .= '(\'' . implode('\', \'', $values) . '\')';
  } else {
  
$sql .= '()';
  }
 
$result = mysql_query($sql,self::$link);
 
var_export($sql);
  if (!
$result) echo 'The row was not added<br>The error was ' . mysql_error();
  return
$result;
 }
}
?>

Unfortunately it looks way different from what I had before (because I copied it from my program), but it fixes these bugs:
- fields MUST have backticks, no single quotes
- empty arrays did trouble
- space after the error echo
q-tech at phreaker dot net
21.09.2006 12:18
In regards to Maviee's fetch function I suggest a more functional approach:

<?php
function msq($q)
  {
      global
$dbqcount; //Count queries for the page;
     
$dbqcount++;
      if (!
$res=mysql_query ($q)) die (mysql_error());
     
$rr[0]=0; //$rr[0] countains number of the returned results
     
if (is_resource($res))
       {
       while (
$rr[]=mysql_fetch_assoc($res)) $rr[0]++;
      
mysql_free_result($res);
       }
      return
$rr;
  }
?>

Also I would like to point out that mysql_fetch_assoc does associate array EXACTLY to the name of the fields/functions you've recieved results for! E.g.:

<?php
$rez
=msq("SELECT MAX(`ID`) FROM `table1`"); // $rez will contain assoc. variable named $rez[1]['MAX(`ID`)'], not $rez[1]['ID']
?>
R. Bradley
14.09.2006 17:34
In response to Sergiu's function - implode() would make things a lot easier ... as below:

<?php
  
function mysql_insert_assoc ($my_table, $my_array) {

      
// Find all the keys (column names) from the array $my_array
      
$columns = array_keys($my_array);

      
// Find all the values from the array
      
$values = array_values($my_array);

      
// We compose the query
      
$sql = "insert into `$my_table` ";
      
// implode the column names, inserting "\", \"" between each (but not after the last one)
       // we add the enclosing quotes at the same time
      
$sql .= "(\"" . implode("\", \"", $column_names) . "\")";
      
$sql .= " values ";
      
// Same with the values
      
$sql .= "(" . implode(", ", $values) . ")";

      
$result = mysql_query($sql);

       if (
$result)
       {
           echo
"The row was added sucessfully";
           return
true;
       }
       else
       {
           echo (
"The row was not added<br>The error was" . mysql_error());
           return
false;
       }
   }
?>

Thus, a call to this function of:
mysql_insert_assoc("tablename", array("col1"=>"val1", "col2"=>"val2"));

Sends the following sql query to mysql:
INSERT INTO `tablename` ("col1", "col2") VALUES ("val1", "val2")
Sergiu
31.08.2006 16:01
A function, fully commented, for inserting an associative array into a table.

<?php
   
function mysql_insert_assoc ($my_table, $my_array) {

       
// Find all the keys from the array $my_array
       
$keys = array_keys($my_array);

       
// Find the number of the keys
       
$keys_number = count($keys);

       
// Generate the column name for the $sql query
       
$column_names = "(";
       
$values = "(";

        for (
$i = 0; $i < $keys_number; $i++) {
           
$column_name = $keys[$i];

           
// We don't add "," after the last one
           
if ($i == ($keys_number - 1)) {
               
$column_names .= "`$keys[$i]`";
               
$values .= "'$my_array[$column_name]'";
            } else {
               
$column_names .= "`$keys[$i]`" . ", ";
               
$values .= "'$my_array[$column_name]'" . ", ";
            }
        }

       
// Proper end the column name and the value
       
$column_names .= ")";
       
$values .= ")";

       
// We compose the query
       
$sql = "insert into `$my_table` ";
       
$sql .= $column_names;
       
$sql .= ' values ';
       
$sql .= $values;

       
$result = mysql_query($sql);

        if (
$result)
        {
            echo
"The row was added sucessfully";
            return
true;
        }
        else
        {
            echo (
"The row was not added<br>The error was" . mysql_error());
            return
false;
        }
    }
?>
rinke van den berg
30.07.2006 11:42
I read someone posting 'I have the philosphy that a function has exactly one return point.'

It seems to me that always having only one return point takes away a little power from 'return' making code less efficient. Compare:

function doSomething($a,$b) {
   $returnVal = 1;
   if($a==$b) { $returnVal = false; }
   if($returnVal !== false) { //didnt we discover that already?
      //do something as we know a and b is what we expect
      $returnVal = $a - $b;
   }
   return $returnVal;
}

with:

function doSomething($a,$b) {
   if($a==$b) { return false; //early exit }
   //do something as we know a and b is what we expect
   return $a-$b;
}
paintedgauthier at gmail dot com
4.03.2006 10:49
Sorry the last one i posted does a normal non-mysql array , this will work the magic on a assoc array

<? function assoc_array_to_mysql() {
global
$array;
   
$update = 'update player set ';
    foreach(
$array as $key => $value) {
        if (
$i) { $update .= key($array);
           
$check = current($array);
            if (isset(
$check)) {
           
$update .= '=\''.current($array).'\'';
            } else { 
$update .= '=null'; }
        } else {
$key = key($array);
       
$current = current($array);
       
$end = "where $key = $current"; }
   
      
next($array);
      
$check = key($array);
       if (isset(
$check)) {
           if (
$i) {$update .= ', '; }
        } else {
$update .= ' '.$end; }
     
$i++;
    }
   
$result = mysql_query($update) or die(mysql_oops($update));
    echo
'Updated';
 }
?>
chasfileDELETE_ALL_CAPS at gmail dot com
23.02.2006 20:26
What if you *want* a two dimensional array?  Useful for output as an HTML table, for instance.

function mysql_resultTo2DAssocArray ( $result) {
    $i=0;
    $ret = array();
    while ($row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)) {
        foreach ($row as $key => $value) {
            $ret[$i][$key] = $value;
            }
        $i++;
        }
    return ($ret);
    }

print_r(mysql_resultTo2DAssocArray(mysql_query("SELECT * FROM something")));

Array ( [0] => Array ( [symbol] => ARNA
          [datetime] => 2006-02-17 16:00:00
          [price] => 16.83 )
     [1] => Array ( [symbol] => CALP
          [datetime] => 2006-02-17 16:00:00
          [price] => 6.54 )
     [2] => Array ( [symbol] => CROX
          [datetime] => 2006-02-17 16:00:00
          [price] => 27.4 ))
jono
2.02.2006 6:22
Note that the field names quoted within $row[] are case sensitive whereas many sql commands are case insensitive.
Maviee at gmx dot net
13.01.2006 11:38
I'll show you a small function which creates a normal array out of a mysql_fetch_assoc foreach loop.
First of all, I want to say, I have the philosphy that a function has exactly one return point. That's why I'm working with a return variable.

Now here is the code:

public function DBSelect($statement)
{
    $ident = mysql_query($statement);
    $result = true;

    if ($ident == false || mysql_num_rows($ident) == 0)
        $result = false;

    // only create the array when everything went fine
    if ($result != false)
    {
        unset($result);
        // workaround to avoid a 2-dimensional array
        foreach(mysql_fetch_assoc($ident) as $key => $value)
        {
            $result[$key] = $value;
        }
        mysql_free_result($ident);
    }
    return $result;
}

14.12.2005 0:25
The following code retrieves all rows but adds an empty array element to the end:
    while ($arr[] = mysql_fetch_assoc($result));
One way to remove it is to also execute the following:
    array_pop($arr);

9.10.2005 4:03
This is a useful script for displaying MySQL results in an HTML table.

<?

function array2table($arr,$width)
   {
  
$count = count($arr);
   if(
$count > 0){
      
reset($arr);
      
$num = count(current($arr));
       echo
"<table align=\"center\" border=\"1\"cellpadding=\"5\" cellspacing=\"0\" width=\"$width\">\n";
       echo
"<tr>\n";
       foreach(
current($arr) as $key => $value){
           echo
"<th>";
           echo
$key."&nbsp;";
           echo
"</th>\n";   
           }   
       echo
"</tr>\n";
       while (
$curr_row = current($arr)) {
           echo
"<tr>\n";
          
$col = 1;
           while (
$curr_field = current($curr_row)) {
               echo
"<td>";
               echo
$curr_field."&nbsp;";
               echo
"</td>\n";
              
next($curr_row);
              
$col++;
               }
           while(
$col <= $num){
               echo
"<td>&nbsp;</td>\n";
              
$col++;       
           }
           echo
"</tr>\n";
          
next($arr);
           }
       echo
"</table>\n";
       }
   }

?>

<?

// Add DB connection script here

$query = "SELECT * FROM mytable";
$result = mysql_query($query);
while(
$row = mysql_fetch_assoc($result)){
 
$array[] = $row; }
       
array2table($array,600); // Will output a table of 600px width

?>
benlanc at ster dot me dot uk
24.08.2005 1:25
It probably without saying, but using list() in conjunction with mysql_fetch_assoc() does not work - use mysql_fetch_row() instead.

<?php
$sql
= "SELECT `id`,`field`,`value` FROM `table`";
$result = mysql_query($sql);

// this results in empty values for rowID,fieldName,myValue
list($rowID,$fieldName,$myValue) = mysql_fetch_assoc($result);

// this is what you want:
list($rowID,$fieldName,$myValue) = mysql_fetch_row($result);
?>
jo at durchholz dot org
21.06.2005 10:58
To sum up moverton at northshropshiredc dot gov dot uk and Olivier Fabre:

If the query is "SELECT something1, something2, .... FROM tbl WHERE some_condition", the keys in the returned array will be 'something1', 'something2', etc. *even for those "somethings" that are not just field names*.

Examples of non-fieldname "somethings" are:
NULL
NOW
MAX(some_fieldname)

I haven't tested whether this applies to table.fieldname, but I see no reason why it shouldn't (I'd suspect a typo in my code if I didn't get the expected results; I certainly have had my share of them!)

I found it most convenient to check for typos by simply var_dumping the resulting row, like this:

<?php
echo '<pre>Got this row:'
var_dump ($row);
echo
'</pre>';
?>

where $row is the result from the last call to mysql_fetch_assoc.
erik[at]phpcastle.com
14.05.2005 21:50
When you have to loop multiple times through the result of a query you can set the result pointer to 0 (zero) with mysql_data_seek ()

The advantage is that you do not have to query database twice with te same query :)

So:
<?php
  $query
= "
    SELECT *
    FROM database
  "
;

 
//Query database
 
$result = mysql_query ($query);

 
//Iterate result
 
while ($record = mysql_fetch_assoc ($result)){
   
print_r ($record);
  }

  ...

 
//Point to 0 (zero)
 
mysql_data_seek ($result, 0);

 
//Re-use the result
 
while ($record = mysql_fetch_assoc ($result)){
   
print_r ($record);
  }
?>
joe at kybert dot com
29.09.2004 10:07
Worth pointing out that the internal row pointer is incremented once the data is collected for the current row.

This means that multiple calls will iterate through the row data, so you DONT need to mysql_data_seek(..) between calls.

This is noted in the  mysql_fetch_row() docs, but not here!?
moverton at northshropshiredc dot gov dot uk
17.09.2004 14:27
Actually, Olivier, you're completely wrong about that, because there's a bug in your sample code. It will indeed return $row['MAX(time)'] - you have to pass the MySQL resource to mysql_fetch_assoc() and you're not doing that. This:

$row = mysql_fetch_assoc($conn)

...where $conn is your DB connection, would in fact produce a result. The complete example below is taken from my own self-written content management system:

$query = 'SELECT MAX(ctRevDate) FROM content group by ctPage';
$querySet = mysql_query($query, $conn);
$row = mysql_fetch_assoc($querySet);
print_r($row);

This produces:

Array
(
    [MAX(ctRevDate)] => 2004-01-15
)

..on my testbed. So it doesn't in fact need an alias at all.
marREtijn dot posthMOuma at hoVEme dot nl
5.09.2003 1:57
It appears that you can't have table.field names in the resulting array.
Just use an alias if your results come up empty and you are using multi-table query's:

$res=mysql_query("SELECT user.ID AS uID, order.ID AS oID FROM user, order WHERE ( order.userid=uID )";
while ($row=mysql_fetch_assoc($res)) {
   echo "<p>userid: $row['uID'], orderid: $row['oID']</p>";
}



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