On Sun, Jul 13, 2008 at 11:12 AM, Stephen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

>  Bastien Koert wrote:
>
> On Sun, Jul 13, 2008 at 10:30 AM, Stephen <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <[EMAIL 
> PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>
>
>  Kevin Waterson wrote:
>
>
>
>  I am switching to PDO and can't find an equivalent to mysql_num_rows.
>
>
>  Am I missing something silly?
>
> Or is there a change of thinking needed for PDO?
>
> How should I determine how many rows a query returned?
>
>
>
>
>  PDO returns an array, sizeof/count will get you home
>
>
>
>
>  I would like to know how many rows I am working with before starting to
> fetch.
>
> Also fetchall, does not seem to have a style that returns each column value
> just once. I see this ugly thing in the manual:
>
> Fetch all of the remaining rows in the result set:
> Array
> (
>   [0] => Array
>       (
>           [NAME] => pear
>           [0] => pear
>           [COLOUR] => green
>           [1] => green
>       )
>
>   [1] => Array
>       (
>           [NAME] => watermelon
>           [0] => watermelon
>           [COLOUR] => pink
>           [1] => pink
>       )
>
> )
>
> If I could get the column offsets only, without the column names I would be
> very happy.
>
> Stephen
>
>
>
>
>  http://ca3.php.net/manual/en/pdostatement.rowcount.php
>
>  This is only good for updates, inserts and deletes.
>
> I am just doing a select.
> Stephen
>
>
my bad.

Note you can change the default return array behaviour by change the
FETCH_STYLE, default is both ordinal and col name

-- 

Bastien

Cat, the other other white meat

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