I am trying to use mySQLi for the first time. I have done it in case of loop. Loop results are showing but i am stuck when i try to show single record. Here is loop code that is working.
<?php
// Connect To DB
$hostname="localhost";
$database="mydbname";
$username="root";
$password="";
@$conn = mysqli_connect($hostname, $username, $password)
or die("Could not connect to server " . mysql_error());
mysqli_select_db($conn, $database)
or die("Error: Could not connect to the database: " . mysql_error());
/*Check for Connection*/
if(mysqli_connect_errno()){
// Display Error message if fails
echo 'Error, could not connect to the database please try again again.';
exit();
}
?>
<?php
$query = "SELECT ssfullname, ssemail FROM userss ORDER BY ssid";
$result = mysqli_query($conn, $query);
@$num_results = mysqli_num_rows($result);
?>
<?php
/*Loop through each row and display records */
for($i=0; $i<$num_results; $i++) {
$row = mysqli_fetch_assoc($result);
?>
<?php // echo 'Name' .$row['ssfullname'] . 'email' . $row['ssemail'] . "\n"; ?>
Name: <?php print $row['ssfullname']; ?>
<br />
Email: <?php print $row['ssemail']; ?>
<br /><br />
<?php
// end loop
}
?>
Above code is fine in case of loop. Now how do i show single record, any record, name or email, from first row or whatever, just single record, how would i do that? In single record case, consider all above loop part removed and lets show any single record without loop.
When just a single result is needed, then no loop should be used. Just fetch the row right away.
In case you need to fetch the entire row into associative array:
$row = $result->fetch_assoc();
in case you need just a single value
$row = $result->fetch_row();
$value = $row[0] ?? false;
The last example will return the first column from the first returned row, or false
if no row was returned. It can be also shortened to a single line,
$value = $result->fetch_row()[0] ?? false;
Below are complete examples for different use cases
When variables are to be used in the query, then a prepared statement must be used. For example, given we have a variable $id
:
$query = "SELECT ssfullname, ssemail FROM userss WHERE ud=?";
$stmt = $conn->prepare($query);
$stmt->bind_param("s", $id);
$stmt->execute()
$result = $stmt->get_result();
$row = $result->fetch_assoc();
// in case you need just a single value
$query = "SELECT count(*) FROM userss WHERE id=?";
$stmt = $conn->prepare($query);
$stmt->bind_param("s", $id);
$stmt->execute()
$result = $stmt->get_result();
$value = $result->fetch_row()[0] ?? false;
The detailed explanation of the above process can be found in my article. As to why you must follow it is explained in this famous question
In your case, where no variables to be used in the query, you can use the query()
method:
$query = "SELECT ssfullname, ssemail FROM userss ORDER BY ssid";
$result = $conn->query($query);
// in case you need an array
$row = $result->fetch_assoc();
// OR in case you need just a single value
$value = $result->fetch_row()[0] ?? false;
By the way, although using raw API while learning is okay, consider using some database abstraction library or at least a helper function in the future:
// using a helper function
$sql = "SELECT email FROM users WHERE id=?";
$value = prepared_select($conn, $sql, [$id])->fetch_row[0] ?? false;
// using a database helper class
$email = $db->getCol("SELECT email FROM users WHERE id=?", [$id]);
As you can see, although a helper function can reduce the amount of code, a class' method could encapsulate all the repetitive code inside, making you to write only meaningful parts - the query, the input parameters and the desired result format (in the form of the method's name).