Chuck PUP Payne wrote:

>By the way I have time this but what is happen and maybe this will clear up
>things.
>

That certainly made things clear. :-)

>I only calling this first myrow call titles. It's not going on to
>the other two. Now in my php page I have this...
>
>$myrow = mysql_fetch_array($result);
>
>$row;
>
>Now this doesn't work.
>

No kidding. What is the line "$row;" supposed to do exactly?

>But this does.
>
>$myrow = mysql_fetch_array($result);
>
>$title = $myrow[title];
>$format = $myrow[format];
>$category =$myrow[category];
>

Yes, this looks better. You should place your array keys in quotes, such 
as $myrow["title"].

I don't see how this relates at all to your example above.

>So want I wanted to do  but I am see you can was to make $row be called from
>db_info.inc so that if lets say I wanted to add ratings I can add it to the
>db_info.inc.
>

It's best to either include your code and reference file names or leave 
them out entirely. You sound like you assume we are looking at your 
screen and know what db_info.inc is.

>The reasoning for this is about 50 pages and I am getting tried
>of change each one I like to be able to change just one file. You know make
>it easier. Better design.
>

I think you have the right idea. I really have no idea what the question 
is, but you should maybe consider the include() function to help you 
out. For example, you could have a script fetch_row.inc like this:

$myrow = mysql_fetch_array($result);
$title = $myrow["title"];
$format = $myrow["format"];
$category =$myrow["category"];

Then every time you wanted to fetch a row from a result set consisting 
of these columns, you could just do this:

include("/path/to/fetch_row.inc");

Maybe that helps? I'm not really understanding what code you are 
repeating 50 times.

Happy hacking.

Chris


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