This is my first experience with mysqli. It seems to be looking for the name of a result set in between the parentheses in mysqli_num_rows(). Yet when I tried $stmt, $conn, and nothing, I got the same error. Frustrating! What goes where $WHAT is in the last line below?
Or maybe I'm trying the wrong tack. All I want to do is check that a result was returned. I don't really need the number of rows. Should I just do an else statement with an error message? Is that the best way to do it? And is there a good way to write a function to connect and accept the query and it's parameters? I wrote one for mysql but this is so different! I'm not looking forward to rewriting dozens of queries!
$conn = mysqli_connect($host, $user, $pwd, $db,$port=$port_nbr);
if ($mysqli_connect_errno) {
printf("Connect failed: %s\n",
mysqli_connect_error());
exit;
}
if($stmt=$conn->prepare("SELECT id, name, status, type FROM organization")) {
$stmt->execute();
$stmt->bind_result($org_id, $orgname, $orgstatus, $orgtype);
$num=mysqli_num_rows($WHAT);
}
You're combining procedural and object oriented approaches, when you only want object oriented. Change
$num=mysqli_num_rows($WHAT);
to
$num = $stmt->num_rows();
mysqli_num_rows takes the query result as a parameter http://us.php.net/manual/en/mysqli-result.num-rows.php
You could also use it in an OOP style as $result->num_rows;
The reason for this error is that you may be passing the $stmt
object to mysqli_num_rows()
.
Moreover, what I see is that you're mixing up two different approaches in php for using mysql databases - the Object-Oriented Approach and the Procedural Approach. You have to chose one of them and then proceed something like this -
Procedural Approach (Using mysqli extension)
$con = mysqli_connect("localhost", "user", "pass", "test") or die("Connection Error: " . mysqli_error($conn));
$query = "SELECT id, name, status, type FROM organization";
$result = mysqli_query($con, $query) or die(mysqli_error($con));
$count = mysqli_num_rows($result);
// $count now stores the number of rows returned from that query
Object-Oriented Approach (Using mysqli extension)
<?php
$host = "localhost";
$username = "user";
$password = "pass";
$dbname = "test";
// Create connection
$conn = new mysqli($host, $username, $password, $dbname);
// Check connection
if ($conn->connect_error) {
die("Connection failed: " . $conn->connect_error);
}
$sql = "SELECT id, name, status, type FROM organization";
$result = $conn->query($sql);
$count = $result->num_rows;
// $count now stores the number of rows returned
$conn->close();
?>
You can read more about it here - https://www.w3schools.com/php/php_mysql_select.asp
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