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sqlite_fetch_column_types(3) [php man page]

SQLITE_FETCH_COLUMN_TYPES(3)											      SQLITE_FETCH_COLUMN_TYPES(3)

sqlite_fetch_column_types - Return an array of column types from a particular table

SYNOPSIS
array sqlite_fetch_column_types (string $table_name, resource $dbhandle, [int $result_type = SQLITE_ASSOC]) DESCRIPTION
Object oriented style (method): array SQLiteDatabase::fetchColumnTypes (string $table_name, [int $result_type = SQLITE_ASSOC]) sqlite_fetch_column_types(3) returns an array of column data types from the specified $table_name table. PARAMETERS
o $table_name - The table name to query. o $dbhandle - The SQLite Database resource; returned from sqlite_open(3) when used procedurally. This parameter is not required when using the object-oriented method. o $result_type - The optional $result_type parameter accepts a constant and determines how the returned array will be indexed. Using SQLITE_ASSOC will return only associative indices (named fields) while SQLITE_NUM will return only numerical indices (ordinal field numbers). SQLITE_ASSOC is the default for this function. RETURN VALUES
Returns an array of column data types; FALSE on error. The column names returned by SQLITE_ASSOC and SQLITE_BOTH will be case-folded according to the value of the sqlite.assoc_case configuration option. CHANGELOG
+--------+--------------------+ |Version | | | | | | | Description | | | | +--------+--------------------+ | 5.1.0 | | | | | | | Added $result_type | | | | +--------+--------------------+ EXAMPLES
Example #1 Procedural example <?php $db = sqlite_open('mysqlitedb'); sqlite_query($db, 'CREATE TABLE foo (bar varchar(10), arf text)'); $cols = sqlite_fetch_column_types('foo', $db, SQLITE_ASSOC); foreach ($cols as $column => $type) { echo "Column: $column Type: $type "; } ?> Example #2 Object-oriented example <?php $db = new SQLiteDatabase('mysqlitedb'); $db->query('CREATE TABLE foo (bar varchar(10), arf text)'); $cols = $db->fetchColumnTypes('foo', SQLITE_ASSOC); foreach ($cols as $column => $type) { echo "Column: $column Type: $type "; } ?> The above example will output: Column: bar Type: VARCHAR Column: arf Type: TEXT PHP Documentation Group SQLITE_FETCH_COLUMN_TYPES(3)

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SQLITE_FETCH_ARRAY(3)													     SQLITE_FETCH_ARRAY(3)

sqlite_fetch_array - Fetches the next row from a result set as an array

SYNOPSIS
array sqlite_fetch_array (resource $result, [int $result_type = SQLITE_BOTH], [bool $decode_binary = true]) DESCRIPTION
Object oriented style (method): array SQLiteResult::fetch ([int $result_type = SQLITE_BOTH], [bool $decode_binary = true]) array SQLiteUnbuffered::fetch ([int $result_type = SQLITE_BOTH], [bool $decode_binary = true]) Fetches the next row from the given $result handle. If there are no more rows, returns FALSE, otherwise returns an associative array rep- resenting the row data. PARAMETERS
o $result - The SQLite result resource. This parameter is not required when using the object-oriented method. o $result_type -The optional $result_type parameter accepts a constant and determines how the returned array will be indexed. Using SQLITE_ASSOC will return only associative indices (named fields) while SQLITE_NUM will return only numerical indices (ordinal field numbers). SQLITE_BOTH will return both associative and numerical indices. SQLITE_BOTH is the default for this function. o $decode_binary -When the $decode_binary parameter is set to TRUE (the default), PHP will decode the binary encoding it applied to the data if it was encoded using the sqlite_escape_string(3). You should normally leave this value at its default, unless you are interoperating with databases created by other sqlite capable applications. RETURN VALUES
Returns an array of the next row from a result set; FALSE if the next position is beyond the final row. The column names returned by SQLITE_ASSOC and SQLITE_BOTH will be case-folded according to the value of the sqlite.assoc_case configuration option. EXAMPLES
Example #1 Procedural example <?php $dbhandle = sqlite_open('sqlitedb'); $query = sqlite_query($dbhandle, 'SELECT name, email FROM users LIMIT 25'); while ($entry = sqlite_fetch_array($query, SQLITE_ASSOC)) { echo 'Name: ' . $entry['name'] . ' E-mail: ' . $entry['email']; } ?> Example #2 Object-oriented example <?php $dbhandle = new SQLiteDatabase('sqlitedb'); $query = $dbhandle->query('SELECT name, email FROM users LIMIT 25'); // buffered result set $query = $dbhandle->unbufferedQuery('SELECT name, email FROM users LIMIT 25'); // unbuffered result set while ($entry = $query->fetch(SQLITE_ASSOC)) { echo 'Name: ' . $entry['name'] . ' E-mail: ' . $entry['email']; } ?> SEE ALSO
sqlite_array_query(3), sqlite_fetch_string(3). PHP Documentation Group SQLITE_FETCH_ARRAY(3)
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