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No matter what I do the same value is being stored in MySQL table field

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2022-12-11 20:53 出处:网络
I have a MySQL table, with the field (\'ad_id\'). I store variables in different fields with PHP. One of these fields, the \'ad_id\' field as mentioned above, stores the same exact nr over and over

I have a MySQL table, with the field ('ad_id').

I store variables in different fields with PHP.

One of these fields, the 'ad_id' field as mentioned above, stores the same exact nr over and over again, no matter what the "REAL" name is in the PHP file.

Example: $ad_id= 12345; When trying to store this, the number 11111 is stored. ALWAYS, no matter what I change the $ad_id variable to.

I even echo the $ad_id variable, and it actually IS 12345, but MySQL stores a value of 11111 anyway.

CODE:

mysql_query("INSERT INTO cars_db 
       (ad_id, area, area_community, price, year, mileage, gearbox, fuel, poster_name, poster_email, poster_tel, poster_password, private_or_company, headline, description, salebuy, total_pics, changeable, hide_tel)
VALUES ('$ad_id', '$area', '$kommun', '$price', '$year', '$mile', '$gearbox', '$fuel', '$name', '$email', '$tel', '$ad_passw', '$priv_or_comp', '$headline', '$ad_text', '$forsale', '$nr_of_pics', '$changeable', '$hide_tel')");

Update with MySQL table info:

CREATE TABLE `cars_db` (
 `id` int(7) NOT NULL AUTO_INCREMENT,
 `ad_id` int(13) NOT NULL,
 `area` varchar(40) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `area_community` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `price` int(9) NOT NULL,
 `year` int(4) NO开发者_开发知识库T NULL,
 `mileage` int(6) NOT NULL,
 `gearbox` varchar(12) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `fuel` varchar(12) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `insert_date` timestamp NOT NULL DEFAULT CURRENT_TIMESTAMP ON UPDATE CURRENT_TIMESTAMP,
 `poster_name` varchar(40) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `poster_email` varchar(50) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `poster_tel` varchar(20) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `poster_password` varchar(15) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `private_or_company` int(2) NOT NULL,
 `headline` varchar(60) COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `description` text COLLATE utf8_swedish_ci NOT NULL,
 `salebuy` int(2) NOT NULL,
 `total_pics` int(2) NOT NULL,
 `changeable` int(1) NOT NULL,
 `hide_tel` int(1) NOT NULL,
 PRIMARY KEY (`id`)
) ENGINE=MyISAM AUTO_INCREMENT=134 DEFAULT CHARSET=utf8 COLLATE=utf8_swedish_ci

Update again:

I tried setting the $ad_id=012345678901 (12 digits) and it didn't work. Once again same problem. But then I tried setting $ad_id=555555 and it worked, MySQL stored that information... The length is the problem I think. Is there a maximum or something? Is there hidden decimals I don't know about. If so, how can I round it?


Update string insert into: All looks fine. Even the value of the $ad_id is ok, 12 digits, but that's not what's inserted into MySQL, because that's a different nr and it is only 10 digits!

- AC
- STEREO
- VINTERDÄCK', 'Säljes', '0', '0', '0') 


Camran you number is too big if you take a look at mysql documentation here it says:

Type  N byte  min value     max value 
INT   4   -2147483648        2147483647

You should generate a smaller random number also if you need that to be random you can use the MySQL RAND function.


The number 668244234626 is out of range for an integer. It's being truncated to the max value for an integer, which is 2147483647.

If you run your INSERT statement in a MySQL client, you get this result:

Query OK, 1 row affected, 1 warning (0.00 sec)

Then if you show warnings:

mysql> show warnings;

+---------+------+------------------------------------------------+
| Level   | Code | Message                                        |
+---------+------+------------------------------------------------+
| Warning | 1264 | Out of range value for column 'ad_id' at row 1 |
+---------+------+------------------------------------------------+

I notice you declare ad_id INT(13). Note that the argument 13 has no effect on the range of values that you can store in the integer. A MySQL integer data type always stores a 32-bit number, and the value you gave is greater than 232.

If you need to store larger values, you should use BIGINT.

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