pg_num_rows

(PHP 4 >= 4.2.0, PHP 5, PHP 7, PHP 8)

pg_num_rowsGibt die Anzahl der Zeilen in einem Abfrageergebnis zurück

Beschreibung

pg_num_rows(PgSql\Result $result): int

pg_num_rows() gibt die Anzahl der Zeilen in einer PostgreSQL PgSql\Result-Instanz zurück.

Hinweis:

Diese Funktion ersetzt die Funktion pg_numrows().

Parameter-Liste

result

Eine PgSql\Result-Instanz, die von pg_query(), pg_query_params() oder pg_execute() (unter anderen) zurückgegeben wurde.

Rückgabewerte

Die Anzahl der Zeilen in einem Abfrageergebnis. Tritt ein Fehler auf, wird -1 zurückgegeben.

Changelog

Version Beschreibung
8.1.0 Der Parameter result erwartet nun eine PgSql\Result-Instanz; vorher wurde eine Ressource erwartet.

Beispiele

Beispiel #1 pg_num_rows() Beispiel

<?php
$result
= pg_query($conn, "SELECT 1");

$rows = pg_num_rows($result);

echo
$rows . " Zeile(n) gefunden.\n";
?>

Das oben gezeigte Beispiel erzeugt folgende Ausgabe:

1 Zeile(n) gefunden.

Siehe auch

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User Contributed Notes 3 notes

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3
strata_ranger at hotmail dot com
14 years ago
As mentioned, if you are performing an INSERT/UPDATE or DELETE query and want to know the # of rows affected, you should use pg_affected_rows() instead of pg_num_rows().

However, you can also exploit postgres's RETURNING clause in your query to auto-select columns from the affected rows.  This has the advantage of being able to tell not only how many rows a query affects, but exactly which rows those were, especially if you return a primary-key column.

For example:

<?php

// Example query.  Let's say that this updates five rows in the source table.
$res = pg_query("Update foo set bar = 'new data' where foo.bar = 'old data' ");
pg_num_rows($res); // 0
pg_affected_rows($res); // 5
pg_fetch_all($res); // FALSE

// Same query, with a RETURNING clause.
$res = pg_query("Update foo set bar = 'new data' where foo.bar = 'old data' RETURNING foo.pkey");
pg_num_rows($res); // 5
pg_affected_rows($res); // 5
pg_fetch_all($res); // Multidimensional array corresponding to our affected rows & returned columns
?>
up
0
ElDiablo
15 years ago
About preceding note, you shouldn't use pg_num_rows() for this.
You should have instead a look at pg_affected_rows().
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0
francisco at natserv dot com
16 years ago
Not sure why this documentation doesn't have the following note:
Note: Use pg_affected_rows() to get number of rows affected by INSERT, UPDATE and DELETE query.

Found on other resources. Adding here in case someone else is looking for the info.
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