Related Links : Search Engine Optimization | | Search Engine Marketing | Online Marketing | Freelance Programmer| SEO Thailand | SEO Expert | SEO services | PHP Programmer Thailand | SEO Tutorial | What is SEO |

  Home Our SEO Services SEO Expert Consultant Php Programmer Scripts| Email : sachin {at} jainsachin {dot} com

PHP | Sends a request to create a prepared statement with the given parameters, without waiting for completion. | Manual | Tutorial | Help

SEO Services



Website Programming in PHP / MYSQL



Friends


    Sends a request to create a prepared statement with the given parameters, without waiting for completion.

    pg_send_prepare

    (PHP 5 >= 5.1.0)

    pg_send_prepare — Sends a request to create a prepared statement with the given parameters, without waiting for completion.

    Description

    bool pg_send_prepare ( resource $connection , string $stmtname , string $query )

    Sends a request to create a prepared statement with the given parameters, without waiting for completion.

    This is an asynchronous version of pg_prepare(): it returns TRUE if it was able to dispatch the request, and FALSE if not. After a successful call, call pg_get_result() to determine whether the server successfully created the prepared statement. The function's parameters are handled identically to pg_prepare(). Like pg_prepare(), it will not work on pre-7.4 versions of PostgreSQL.

    Parameters

    connection

    PostgreSQL database connection resource. When connection is not present, the default connection is used. The default connection is the last connection made by pg_connect() or pg_pconnect().

    stmtname

    The name to give the prepared statement. Must be unique per-connection. If "" is specified, then an unnamed statement is created, overwriting any previously defined unnamed statement.

    query

    The parameterised SQL statement. Must contain only a single statement. (multiple statements separated by semi-colons are not allowed.) If any parameters are used, they are referred to as $1, $2, etc.

    Return Values

    Returns TRUE on success, FALSE on failure. Use pg_get_result() to determine the query result.

    Examples

    Example #1 Using pg_send_prepare()

    <?php
      $dbconn 
    pg_connect("dbname=publisher") or die("Could not connect");

      
    // Prepare a query for execution
      
    if (!pg_connection_busy($dbconn)) {
        
    pg_send_prepare($dbconn"my_query"'SELECT * FROM shops WHERE name = $1');
        
    $res1 pg_get_result($dbconn);
      }

      
    // Execute the prepared query.  Note that it is not necessary to escape
      // the string "Joe's Widgets" in any way
      
    if (!pg_connection_busy($dbconn)) {
        
    pg_send_execute($dbconn"my_query", array("Joe's Widgets"));
        
    $res2 pg_get_result($dbconn);
      }
      
      
    // Execute the same prepared query, this time with a different parameter
      
    if (!pg_connection_busy($dbconn)) {
        
    pg_send_execute($dbconn"my_query", array("Clothes Clothes Clothes"));
        
    $res3 pg_get_result($dbconn);
      }
      
    ?>


    SEO Tutorial / Articles





    Php / Mysql Tutorial



    Articles



      Portfolio


      SEO by Jainsachin