| ###################### |
| Query Helper Functions |
| ###################### |
| |
| $this->db->insert_id() |
| ======================= |
| |
| The insert ID number when performing database inserts. |
| |
| .. note:: If using the PDO driver with PostgreSQL, this function requires |
| a $name parameter, which specifies the appropriate sequence to check |
| for the insert id. |
| |
| $this->db->affected_rows() |
| =========================== |
| |
| Displays the number of affected rows, when doing "write" type queries |
| (insert, update, etc.). |
| |
| .. note:: In MySQL "DELETE FROM TABLE" returns 0 affected rows. The database |
| class has a small hack that allows it to return the correct number of |
| affected rows. By default this hack is enabled but it can be turned off |
| in the database driver file. |
| |
| $this->db->count_all(); |
| ======================== |
| |
| Permits you to determine the number of rows in a particular table. |
| Submit the table name in the first parameter. Example:: |
| |
| echo $this->db->count_all('my_table'); // Produces an integer, like 25 |
| |
| $this->db->platform() |
| ===================== |
| |
| Outputs the database platform you are running (MySQL, MS SQL, Postgres, |
| etc...):: |
| |
| echo $this->db->platform(); |
| |
| $this->db->version() |
| ==================== |
| |
| Outputs the database version you are running:: |
| |
| echo $this->db->version(); |
| |
| $this->db->last_query(); |
| ========================= |
| |
| Returns the last query that was run (the query string, not the result). |
| Example:: |
| |
| $str = $this->db->last_query(); // Produces: SELECT * FROM sometable.... |
| |
| The following two functions help simplify the process of writing |
| database INSERTs and UPDATEs. |
| |
| $this->db->insert_string(); |
| ============================ |
| |
| This function simplifies the process of writing database inserts. It |
| returns a correctly formatted SQL insert string. Example:: |
| |
| $data = array('name' => $name, 'email' => $email, 'url' => $url); $str = $this->db->insert_string('table_name', $data); |
| |
| The first parameter is the table name, the second is an associative |
| array with the data to be inserted. The above example produces:: |
| |
| INSERT INTO table_name (name, email, url) VALUES ('Rick', 'rick@example.com', 'example.com') |
| |
| Note: Values are automatically escaped, producing safer queries. |
| |
| $this->db->update_string(); |
| ============================ |
| |
| This function simplifies the process of writing database updates. It |
| returns a correctly formatted SQL update string. Example:: |
| |
| $data = array('name' => $name, 'email' => $email, 'url' => $url); $where = "author_id = 1 AND status = 'active'"; $str = $this->db->update_string('table_name', $data, $where); |
| |
| The first parameter is the table name, the second is an associative |
| array with the data to be updated, and the third parameter is the |
| "where" clause. The above example produces:: |
| |
| UPDATE table_name SET name = 'Rick', email = 'rick@example.com', url = 'example.com' WHERE author_id = 1 AND status = 'active' |
| |
| Note: Values are automatically escaped, producing safer queries. |