©
このドキュメントでは、 php中国語ネットマニュアル リリース
(PHP 5)
mysqli::$affected_rows -- mysqli_affected_rows — Gets the number of affected rows in a previous MySQL operation
面向对象风格
过程化风格
$link
)Returns the number of rows affected by the last INSERT, UPDATE, REPLACE or DELETE query.
For SELECT statements mysqli_affected_rows() works like mysqli_num_rows() .
link
仅以过程化样式:由 mysqli_connect() 或 mysqli_init() 返回的链接标识。
An integer greater than zero indicates the number of rows affected or retrieved. Zero indicates that no records were updated for an UPDATE statement, no rows matched the WHERE clause in the query or that no query has yet been executed. -1 indicates that the query returned an error.
Note:
If the number of affected rows is greater than the maximum integer value(
PHP_INT_MAX
), the number of affected rows will be returned as a string.
Example #1 $mysqli->affected_rows example
面向对象风格
<?php
$mysqli = new mysqli ( "localhost" , "my_user" , "my_password" , "world" );
if ( mysqli_connect_errno ()) {
printf ( "Connect failed: %s\n" , mysqli_connect_error ());
exit();
}
$mysqli -> query ( "CREATE TABLE Language SELECT * from CountryLanguage" );
printf ( "Affected rows (INSERT): %d\n" , $mysqli -> affected_rows );
$mysqli -> query ( "ALTER TABLE Language ADD Status int default 0" );
$mysqli -> query ( "UPDATE Language SET Status=1 WHERE Percentage > 50" );
printf ( "Affected rows (UPDATE): %d\n" , $mysqli -> affected_rows );
$mysqli -> query ( "DELETE FROM Language WHERE Percentage < 50" );
printf ( "Affected rows (DELETE): %d\n" , $mysqli -> affected_rows );
$result = $mysqli -> query ( "SELECT CountryCode FROM Language" );
printf ( "Affected rows (SELECT): %d\n" , $mysqli -> affected_rows );
$result -> close ();
$mysqli -> query ( "DROP TABLE Language" );
$mysqli -> close ();
?>
过程化风格
<?php
$link = mysqli_connect ( "localhost" , "my_user" , "my_password" , "world" );
if (! $link ) {
printf ( "Can't connect to localhost. Error: %s\n" , mysqli_connect_error ());
exit();
}
mysqli_query ( $link , "CREATE TABLE Language SELECT * from CountryLanguage" );
printf ( "Affected rows (INSERT): %d\n" , mysqli_affected_rows ( $link ));
mysqli_query ( $link , "ALTER TABLE Language ADD Status int default 0" );
mysqli_query ( $link , "UPDATE Language SET Status=1 WHERE Percentage > 50" );
printf ( "Affected rows (UPDATE): %d\n" , mysqli_affected_rows ( $link ));
mysqli_query ( $link , "DELETE FROM Language WHERE Percentage < 50" );
printf ( "Affected rows (DELETE): %d\n" , mysqli_affected_rows ( $link ));
$result = mysqli_query ( $link , "SELECT CountryCode FROM Language" );
printf ( "Affected rows (SELECT): %d\n" , mysqli_affected_rows ( $link ));
mysqli_free_result ( $result );
mysqli_query ( $link , "DROP TABLE Language" );
mysqli_close ( $link );
?>
以上例程会输出:
Affected rows (INSERT): 984 Affected rows (UPDATE): 168 Affected rows (DELETE): 815 Affected rows (SELECT): 169
[#1] Michael [2014-11-15 18:35:50]
If you need to know specifically whether the WHERE condition of an UPDATE operation failed to match rows, or that simply no rows required updating you need to instead check mysqli::$info.
As this returns a string that requires parsing, you can use the following to convert the results into an associative array.
Object oriented style:
<?php
preg_match_all ('/(\S[^:]+): (\d+)/', $mysqli->info, $matches);
$info = array_combine ($matches[1], $matches[2]);
?>
Procedural style:
<?php
preg_match_all ('/(\S[^:]+): (\d+)/', mysqli_info ($link), $matches);
$info = array_combine ($matches[1], $matches[2]);
?>
You can then use the array to test for the different conditions
<?php
if ($info ['Rows matched'] == 0) {
echo "This operation did not match any rows.\n";
} elseif ($info ['Changed'] == 0) {
echo "This operation matched rows, but none required updating.\n";
}
if ($info ['Changed'] < $info ['Rows matched']) {
echo ($info ['Rows matched'] - $info ['Changed'])." rows matched but were not changed.\n";
}
?>
This approach can be used with any query that mysqli::$info supports (INSERT INTO, LOAD DATA, ALTER TABLE, and UPDATE), for other any queries it returns an empty array.
For any UPDATE operation the array returned will have the following elements:
Array
(
[Rows matched] => 1
[Changed] => 0
[Warnings] => 0
)
[#2] fastest963 at gmail dot com [2014-06-10 05:50:46]
empty($db->affected_rows) will return TRUE even if affected_rows is greater than 0. Manually check < 1 if you're looking for failure.
[#3] ric at xpellshop dot com [2011-07-10 11:54:43]
"Zero indicates that no records where updated for an UPDATE statement, no rows matched the WHERE clause in the query or that no query has yet been executed."
what if i need to know which one of the three occurred? It's dumb that there is no distinction between the three.
[#4] Anonymous [2011-02-18 14:50:25]
On "INSERT INTO ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE" queries, though one may expect affected_rows to return only 0 or 1 per row on successful queries, it may in fact return 2.
From Mysql manual: "With ON DUPLICATE KEY UPDATE, the affected-rows value per row is 1 if the row is inserted as a new row and 2 if an existing row is updated."
See: http://dev.mysql.com/doc/refman/5.0/en/insert-on-duplicate.html
Here's the sum breakdown _per row_:
+0: a row wasn't updated or inserted (likely because the row already existed, but no field values were actually changed during the UPDATE)
+1: a row was inserted
+2: a row was updated
[#5] djnigelharkness at yahoo dot com [2010-05-12 05:42:40]
<?php
$gHostName ="localhost";
$gUserName ="root";
$gPassword ="mypassword";
$gDBName ="dbName";
$mysqli = new mysqli($gHostName, $gUserName, $gPassword,
$gDBName);
$username="username"; $email="user@xxx.edu";
$password="3442f6e94a733237a3e844f0286b92f559bf794d";
//insert
// $stmt = $mysqli->prepare("INSERT INTO j_user
(username,email,password) VALUES (?, ?, ?)");
// $stmt->bind_param('sss',$username, $email, $password);
// $stmt->execute();
// $stmt->close();
//delete
// $stmt = $mysqli->prepare("DELETE FROM j_user WHERE
username=?");
// $stmt->bind_param('s',$username);
// $stmt->execute();
// $stmt->close();
//update
// $stmt = $mysqli->prepare("UPDATE j_user SET email=? WHERE
username='wjw6349'");
// $stmt->bind_param('s',$email);
// $stmt->execute();
// $stmt->close();
if ($mysqli->connect_error){
echo("Connect failed: ".mysqli_connect_error()); exit();
}
$querySelect = "SELECT * FROM j_user";
$resultSet = $mysqli->query($querySelect);
if($resultSet->num_rows > 0){
while($row = $resultSet->fetch_assoc()){
foreach($row as $fieldValue){
$bigString .= "<em>$fieldValue</em><br />\n";
}
$bigString .= "<hr />";
}
$mysqli->close();
echo $bigString;
}
function __autoload($className) {
require_once $className.'.class.php';
}
//start the session and create it
session_start();
$_SESSION['name'] = $_POST['username']."_".time();
//encrypt the password
sha1($_POST['password']) == $password
header("Location:admin.php");
//check if the session is set
session_start();
if (isset($_SESSION['name'])) { }
?>
[#6] oilpc at oilpc dot com [2009-11-14 10:06:32]
For "INSERT" or "UPDATE" statement for modifying data contained in one row of one table I checked if number of affected rows equals 1 to determine success of the operation. It works fine both for errors and false value of WHERE condition (that might be generated according to specific application user acces privileges).
<?php
if ($mysqli->affected_rows==1){
echo "success";
}
else {
echo "fail";
}
?>
Checking if mysqli->affected_rows will equal -1 or not is not a good method of determining success of "INSERT IGNORE" statements. Example: Ignoring duplicate key errors while inserting some rows containing data provided by user only if they will match specified unique constraint causes returning of -1 value by mysqli->affected_rows even if rows were inserted. (checked on MySQL 5.0.85 linux and php 5.2.9-2 windows). However mysqli->sqlstate returns no error if statement was executed successfully.
<?php
if ($mysqli->affected_rows!=-1){
echo "success";// for "INSERT IGNORE" statements will not occur if there were any duplicate key errors ignored during execution of the query
}
else {
echo "fail";// "INSERT IGNORE" statements causing any duplicate key errors (however ignored) lead to mysqli->affected_rows equal -1
}
// Example below works for "INSERT IGNORE" stattements, too
if ($mysqli->sqlstate=="00000"){
echo "success";
}
else {
echo "fail";
}
?>